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Let’s be honest: Love songs always hit right in the feels. A ballad can transform from a regular song into the soundtrack of your relationship—whether you’re celebrating your 25th ...
Oh, he looks so cute wrapped around my finger. My twisted humor, make him laugh so often. My honey bee, come and get this pollen. Too bad your ex don’t do it for ya. Walked in and dream came ...
You can go from a jazzy number that spells out letters (like “L-O-V-E” by Nat King Cole) to a rock hit that breaks down the true meaning of love (like “I Want to Know What Love Is” by ...
I boldly stepped up to him, and kindly did ask him, Why he was wrapped up in flannel so white? My body is injured and sadly disordered, All by a young woman, my own heart's delight. My father oft told me, and oftentimes chided me, And said my wicked ways would never do, But I never minded him, nor ever heeded him, I always kept up my wicked ways.
The bulk of the song came from a one take performance that Costello later described as "among the best that the Attractions and I ever caught in a single take". [6] Emerick's use of Fairchild valve compressors on the song resulted in what Costello described as "a sense of the music pushing back against some intolerable weight". [6] Costello ...
The 2-minute-38-second song is in the key of C major, changing later in the song to C sharp / D flat major, with a tempo of 121 beats per minute.. The song makes countless references to candy and sugar, and the narrator compares these two sweet treats to the object of his affection, at some point calling her a "living box of candy wrapped up so very fine" with a "mouthful of such sweet things ...
Ding dong! Tuesday, February 4th is National Thank a Mail Carrier Day. A time to show some love! Mail carriers are unsung heroes who help keep us in touch with the world.
The author was William Hope-Jones, [2] a housemaster at Eton, [3] who wrote it some time before 1914, as he sang it at a college dinner at that time. "Ho Jo" appears in the M. R. James ' ghost story Wailing Well (1928), in which a group of masters take the Eton Scout Troop on an ill-fated camping expedition.