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I Know Who Holds Tomorrow Suppertime 1951: Beyond Tomorrow 1952: A Crown Of Thorns 1953: Follow Me Just Tell Them When You Saw Me I Was On My Way 1954: Inside Those Pearly Gates 1955: He Washed My Eyes With Tears 1958: I Walk With His Hand In Mine 1959: Unworthy 1961: The Choice Is Mine 1968: Happiness Is The Lord 1972: If I've Forgotten Today 1975
"Tomorrow Never Knows" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles, written primarily by John Lennon and credited to Lennon–McCartney. [9] It was released in August 1966 as the final track on their album Revolver, although it was the first song recorded for the LP.
"I don't know where I'm going, I don't want to see," the singer laments. "This Time Tomorrow" opens with the sound of an aeroplane flying, followed by guitar and a National Steel resonator guitar. The song also features Kinks pianist John Gosling, with the song being one of Gosling's first ever appearances on a Kinks record.
I Know Who Holds Tomorrow is an album by American violinist/singer Alison Krauss and the Cox Family, released in 1994. At the Grammy Awards of 1995 , I Know Who Holds Tomorrow won the Grammy Award for Best Southern, Country or Bluegrass Gospel Album .
The One Direction crooner celebrated his 22nd birthday on Monday by doing what we all did when we turned 22 -- by posting the lyrics to Taylor Swift's age-defining song "22" on social media.
In 1989, Siedah Garrett wrote lyrics to the song, and it was recorded by Quincy Jones featuring Tevin Campbell on vocals for the album Back on the Block.The new version of the song spent one week at number one on the US R&B chart and peaked at number seventy-five on the US pop chart in June 1990. [1]
"He's saying, 'Well, I don't really care; it doesn't matter to me,' which is what the song is about. The audience see's through the performance. They know that underneath it, he is affected and ...
Giving the song four and-a-half out of five stars, Matt Bjorke of Roughstock stated that "Even if “All About Tonight” isn’t a ‘deep’ song, it has that southern rock melody mixed with a good time joe attitude that clearly makes “All About Tonight” one of the most obvious hit singles of Blake Shelton’s career to date" [2]