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"And I Love You So" is a popular song written by folk singer and guitarist Don McLean and released on his 1970 debut album, Tapestry. Its chorus features an unusual rhyming scheme for a popular song: ABBA versus the usual AB(C or A)B.
"I Love You So" is a song by American indie-pop band the Walters. It was released on November 28, 2014 from the band's debut EP Songs for Dads . In 2021, it went viral on video sharing app TikTok , where it has over half a million views, and gained over 1 billion streams on Spotify . [ 1 ]
The song's lyrics reference Where the Wild Things Are: Newman sings "Do you know where the wild things go?" and the song ends with the repeated refrain "Please don't go, I'll eat you whole / I love you so;" [4] Maurice Sendak's words are: "Oh, please don't go — we'll eat you up — we love you so!" [5]
"Ko Ko Mo (I Love You So)" is a popular rock novelty song written in late 1954 by the rhythm and blues partnership of Forest Gene Wilson and Eunice Levy, [1] and also credited to Jake Porter. One of the earliest rock and roll songs, [ 2 ] it was probably "the most extensively recorded rock 'n' roll song of that time".
Don Gibson in 1968 for his album I Love You So Much It Hurts. [4] Andy Williams in 1974 on his album, You Lay So Easy on My Mind; R. Stevie Moore in 1986 on his album, Glad Music; John Prine in 1995, on the album Lost Dogs and Mixed Blessings; Merle Haggard in 2002, on the album The Peer Sessions; Madeleine Peyroux in 2013, on the album The ...
In 2019, Taylor Swift released the upbeat pop song “London Boy.” Five years later, she’s saying “so long” to the city with her new song “So Long London.”
“For us, music is freedom and once you’re in a band, you have a role,” Mosqueda says. “Chucho and me, we can do whatever we want. Chucho can make the baselines…I can sing, Chucho can ...
Oh, Danny boy, Oh Danny boy, I love you so! But when ye come, and all the flowers are dying, If I am dead, as dead I well may be, Ye'll come and find the place where I am lying, And kneel and say an Avé there for me. And I shall hear, though soft you tread above me, And all my grave will warmer, sweeter be, For you will bend and tell me that ...