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SingersRoom critic Simon Robinson rated it Big Star's best song, praising the "catchy melody and jangly guitars that perfectly capture the carefree and optimistic spirit of youth" and the "simple yet poignant" lyrics that evoke the "experience of teenage romance and heartbreak." [7] The song was originally featured on the 1972 album #1 Record.
We've all been there — singing along to a song with our friends when suddenly, we realize we've been belting out the wrong lyrics. A few years ago, Starkey Hearing Technologies surveyed 2,000 ...
All songs by Don Walker except "Wild Thing" by Chip Taylor. Side one "One Long Day" "Home and Broken Hearted" Side two "Merry-Go-Round" "Mona and the Preacher" "Wild Thing" 1982's German release of the EP is noteworthy: the A-side runs at 45 RPM and the B-side (some pressings) runs at 33 1/3 RPM. Additionally, the tracks have been re-ordered ...
"Baby Did a Bad Bad Thing" is a song by American musician Chris Isaak, released as the first track to the 1995 album Forever Blue. Filled with sensuality and erotic imagery, the song was described by Isaak as a declaration to "Somebody who is so evil and twisted and bad, and yet, you still want them."
Genuinely, the first thing I thought after listening to Olivia Rodrigo's new album GUTS (after wiping away my tears) was, 'This album is *soooooo* perfectly teenage girl.' I think we can all agree ...
The music was written by Henry Sullivan, the lyrics by Harry Ruskin, arranged by Dan Daugherty, and the original music publisher was Ager, Yellen, and Bornstein, Inc. [1] The song was published in 1929 and it was included in the musical revue Murray Anderson's Almanac which ran for 69 performances at Erlanger's Theatre on Broadway in 1929. [2]
13 Songs and a Thing, a 2003 album by Bob Drake Volume II: Thirteen Songs from the House of Miracles , a 2001 album by The Two-Minute Miracles Topics referred to by the same term
When the song was first released, Rick Melbourne, a breakfast radio announcer, produced a parody version of the song, including the lyrics "God help me, she told me she was sixteen". Australian country singer John Williamson recorded a live version as "Only 19" and released it on his 1984 vinyl LP, The Smell of Gumleaves (rereleased in 1996 as ...