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Steven Jay Page (born June 22, 1970) is a Canadian musician, singer, songwriter, and record producer. He was a founding member, lead singer, guitarist, and primary songwriter of the music group Barenaked Ladies .
Steven Page began collaborating with songwriter Stephen Duffy in the early 1990s, and their first co-written tracks appeared on the Barenaked Ladies' second release, Maybe You Should Drive. The two co-wrote a number of songs over the years, including several on each of the band's next two albums.
The song was written by Steven Page as a tribute to the Beach Boys' co-founder Brian Wilson. It was released as a single and peaked at number 18 on the Canadian Singles Chart. In 1998, the song peaked at number 68 on the US Billboard Hot 100. Wilson himself covered the song on his live album Live at the Roxy Theatre (2000).
Contestant Steven Page won $9,000 for solving a puzzle and advanced to the bonus round, despite not correctly pronouncing the answer.
Page One is an album by Steven Page, released by Anthem Records on 19 October 2010. It is his first solo album of original material since departing Barenaked Ladies in February 2009. Page One includes seven songs composed by Page with longtime collaborator Stephen Duffy and a pair of songs with first-time collaborator Craig Northey. The ...
"If I Had $1000000" is a song by the Canadian musical group Barenaked Ladies from their album Gordon. Composed by founding members Steven Page and Ed Robertson, the sing-along track has become one of the band's best-known songs, and is a live show staple, despite never having been a true single and without an accompanying music video.
A Singer Must Die is a collaboration between the Canadian music organization Art of Time Ensemble and vocalist Steven Page.It is Page's first release following his departure from Barenaked Ladies, although it was recorded before he left the band and originally conceived as a side project, [1] and his first solo album since 2005's The Vanity Project.
On another page, he had scrawled, “Wasted Youth,” a tribute to a hardcore band he knew well. Hamm’s role at Grateful Life made him feel important. Yet despite his embrace of the program, there was still a small part of him that worried that all the classwork and Narcotics Anonymous meetings weren’t enough.