Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"Best of My Love" is a song written by Don Henley, Glenn Frey, and JD Souther. It was originally recorded by the Eagles (with Henley singing lead vocals), and included on their 1974 album On the Border. The song was released as the third single from the album, and it became the band's first Billboard Hot 100 number 1 single in March 1975.
The song was ranked at number 87 on "The Billboard Hot 100 All-Time Top Songs". [5] It was also the third biggest pop song of 1977 and the fifth biggest R&B song of 1977. [6] [7] "Best of My Love" has been certified platinum in the US by the RIAA and silver in the UK by the BPI.
The lyrics are about temptations and reluctance caused by a dangerous love affair. Big Machine Records released "Sparks Fly" to country radio in the United States on July 18, 2011, as the fifth single from Speak Now. The accompanying music video was released on August 10, 2011, and it features footage from the Speak Now World Tour. Some critics ...
Best known for their quirky approach to songwriting, [1] Sparks' music is often accompanied by cutting and acerbic lyrics, [2] and an idiosyncratic stage presence, typified in the contrast between Russell's wide-eyed hyperactive frontman antics and Ron's sedentary scowling. [3]
The Best of Love is the first compilation album by American singer Luther Vandross, released on October 4, 1989. It contains two previously unreleased songs, " Here and Now "—which became Vandross' first top ten pop hit and won the Grammy Award for Best R&B Vocal Performance, Male in 1991 —and the 1990 US #5 R&B single " Treat You Right ".
"Best Days of Your Life" is a song performed by American country music artist Kellie Pickler. It was written by Pickler and American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift who also provides background vocals on the song. It was released on December 1, 2008, as the second single from Kellie Pickler's second album Kellie Pickler. [1]
The two developed "Your Love" on the porch of the flat. Lewis sat on an amplifier and Spinks began writing the opening lyrics. According to Lewis, the song took only twenty minutes to write. [4] The song's lyrics have no basis in reality: "Josie" was not a real person, and the song is an entirely invented story.
Billboard ranked it at no. 12 on a ranking of the genre's best love songs, with columnist Hannah Dailey writing, "Love can be complicated. No one knows that better than The Starting Line, whose youthful 2003 hit examines how mature conversations, forgiveness and time spent apart are sometimes needed to make a long-term relationship work."