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Rocksteady is a music genre that originated in Jamaica around 1966. [1] A successor of ska and a precursor to reggae, rocksteady was the dominant style of music in Jamaica for nearly two years, performed by many of the artists who helped establish reggae, including harmony groups such as the Techniques, the Paragons, the Heptones and the Gaylads; soulful singers such as Alton Ellis, [2] Delroy ...
The song features Musiq Soulchild singing vocals. It was written by Matchbox Twenty's Rob Thomas along with Cory Rooney. "Nothing at All" was produced by Rooney and Dan Shea. The music video was directed by Marc Webb, with the female lead played by Joy Bryant and the male lead played by actor Andre Warmsley.
Nothing at All or Nothin' at All may refer to: "Nothing at All" (Santana song), 2003 "Nothing at All" (Kasey Chambers song), 2006 Nothin' at All (Heart song), 1986 "Nothing at All", a 1957 song by The Wilburn Brothers
"All I Know" is a song written by American songwriter Jimmy Webb, first recorded by Art Garfunkel on his 1973 debut solo album, Angel Clare, released by Columbia Records. Instrumental backing was provided by members of the Wrecking Crew , L.A. session musicians. [ 1 ]
Rock Steady, or the title song, by No Doubt, 2001 Rock Steady with Flo & Eddie , by Flo & Eddie, 1981 Rocksteady (Big Head Todd and the Monsters album) , or the title song, 2010
The song was released by Parlophone on 6 November 2006. All Saints collaborated with Kurstin on a number of songs; six were chosen for the album. "Rock Steady" was released as the first single from it. The song contains prominent 2 tone, dance-pop, reggae fusion, rocksteady and ska musical characteristics. It is lyrically influenced by the ...
The track functions as a love song that describes a new romantic relationship which falls into place without any interpersonal conflict or even real effort. The song's title phrase is employed twice: both when the narrator describes the new relationship as being like "nothin' at all" (compared to everything else that she's previously experienced) and additionally when she asks the song's ...
"When You Say Nothing At All" is the opening track on Frances Black's third solo album, The Smile on Your Face (1996), the title of the album being a lyric from this song. Released in August 1996 as the album's first single, this single became her third to reach the Irish top 10, peaking at number eight during an 11-week run in the top 30.