|
Register Now!
|
|
Register now for vtap for the fastest and easiest way to watch web video on your mobile device!
|
|
"Trouble" is the third single from Coldplay's debut album Parachutes. This was the band's second Top 10 hit on the UK Singles Chart, peaking at number 10. Regional singles were released for UK/Europe, Norway (Live EP), and Australia (Double A-side). Promo releases included the UK, USA, and Taiwan.
"Trouble" is a piano-based ballad that underwent many stages of development. In September 1999, the song was dominated by fast guitar riffs and aggressive vocals reminiscent of Supergrass. blank">http://www.coldplaying.com/index.php?module=PostWrap&page=/html/discography/trouble.htm This version can be previewed on the Tour Diary of the _Live 2003 DVD. By November, live performances of "Trouble" began to incorporate the piano. At the final recording sessions for Parachutes, the song was slowed down to its current form with the new guitar and percussion pieces.
"Trouble" is a song by Lindsey Buckingham. It was the biggest hit off the album Law and Order, which was released in 1981. It was also Buckingham's first hit as a solo artist.
"Trouble" was the only song on the album that Buckingham didn't play bass or drums on; his Fleetwood Mac bandmate Mick Fleetwood was brought in to do the drums. Things didn't work out very well in the recording session, and a taped loop of the drum track, about four-seconds long, was used over and over for the song. The song is sung in a light falsetto.
The single would become a Top 10 hit in the US in early 1982. It topped the charts in Australia for 3 weeks.
The distinctive music video for "Trouble" features a multi-instrumental "big-band" featuring a plethora of male musicians, including Mick Fleetwood.
"Trouble" is the first track on the debut album of the same name by Maine folk singer Ray LaMontagne. The album was released by RCA on September 14 2004. It has also appeared on LaMontagne's Live From Bonnaroo EP, released in 2005.
The song appeared in a second-season episode of the television program Rescue Me (as did "Burn" and "All the Wild Horses" during the second season). This song was performed by Taylor Hicks on American Idol (Season 5), March 28 2006. During her 2006 tour, American Idol first season winner Kelly Clarkson covered the song, as well. Chris Sligh also performed this song on American Idol (Season 6), February 27 2007.
It was also used in Out of Time (Torchwood), an episode in series one of Torchwood
The single charted at #25 on the UK Singles Chart.
"Trouble" is a Grammy Award winning rock song recorded by Pink for her third studio album Try This (2003). It was written by Tim Armstrong and Pink and features a prominent guitar riff. The song was released as the album's first single in late 2003 (see 2003 in music) and was moderately successful, reaching number two on the Canadian Singles Chart on November 29 2003. Elsewhere it was less popular and in the U.S. it failed to enter the top forty.
The song was featured in "White Chicks" (2004).
"Trouble" is a popular song by Cat Stevens. The song first appeared on his 1970 album Mona Bone Jakon and later in the film Harold and Maude, for which Cat Stevens provided the soundtrack and A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints.
The song was featured on an episode of ER in which Dr. John Carter and Abby Lockhart travel to Kansas to retrieve Abby's unstable mother. It was also seen on the television show Alias when Sydney reveals her spy status to her fiance Danny which eventually leads to his death. Many artists covered the song, including Elliott Smith (on the soundtrack to Thumbsucker), both Anthony Kiedis and John Frusciante of Red Hot Chili Peppers and Eddie Vedder of Pearl Jam. The Athens, Georgia jamband Widespread Panic has performed "Trouble" live since 1989. It is also used in the 2006 film A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints. There is a cover on the internet often found on the likes of Ares/Limewire claiming that it is a cover by Oasis but no such cover was recorded, the vocals do happen to sound like one Fran Healy of Travis, however. .






