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The music video for the song "Hesitate" off the band's third full-length Audio Secrecy. Frontman Corey Taylor offers the following explanation behind the concept of the song: [1] "Hesitate" is "about letting go of something that you want with all your heart that you know is just gonna do nothing but damage to you," he continues.
The song spent four weeks at number-one on the UK Singles Chart in March 1990. [4] It was the seventh best-selling single of 1990 in the UK. [5] The single also made it to the top 10 in Austria (number two), Belgium, Greece (number two), Ireland, the Netherlands (number two), Norway, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and West Germany.
Shortly after Joe Jonas filed for divorce from Sophie Turner, he subtly tweaked the lyrics of the Jonas Brothers ballad that he wrote in her honor. During the Wednesday, September 6, concert in ...
"I Won't Say (I'm in Love)" is a song written by composer Alan Menken and lyricist David Zippel for Disney's animated film Hercules (1997). Included on the film's soundtrack, the song is performed by American actress and singer Susan Egan in her role as Meg, Hercules' love interest, while singers Cheryl Freeman, Lillias White, Vaneese Thomas, LaChanze and Roz Ryan provide girl group-style ...
"Nothing More to Say" is the debut single [a] by the English musician Sophie, released in January 2013 through Huntleys + Palmers. The single contains the song " Eeehhh " and two versions of the title track, one of which had involvement from DJ Jackmaster .
The single was released to radio stations in Canada and the United States but was only released commercially overseas. "I Alone" reached No. 6 on the US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart and was ranked 62nd-best song of the 1990s by VH1. [3] Live performed "I Alone" at the Woodstock '99 festival on July 23, 1999, in Rome, New York. [4]
The "Reflections in Red" single was his first musical release, and the first Jamaican dub poetry record, recorded with the backing of Wailers rhythm section Aston and Carlton Barrett at Tuff Gong studios and released in 1979 on Bob Marley's "56 Hope Road" label. [5]
The Guardian ranked it as the tenth best Faith No More song in 2014. [4] They wrote, "Album of the Year sounded unfinished and is barely listenable. But one track, 'Ashes to Ashes', stood out. It is a moody rocker, with a memorably anthemic chorus that soared thanks to one of the finest vocal performances of Patton's career."