Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The song was written by Brian McFadden, Stuart Crichton and Tommy Lee James, with Delta Goodrem. It was produced by Crichton and Marius de Vries. It discusses choosing not to associate with a future lover because he will only break her heart and he never tells her whats on his mind. Seen in the lyrics. The song is a perky reggae sing along song.
Keep Climbing. " Keep Climbing " is a song by Australian singer-songwriter Delta Goodrem, co-written by Goodrem with Matthew Copley and Sebastian Kole. It was released to streaming services on 14 May 2020 by Sony Music Australia. The song is a motivational piano-led power ballad about hope and overcoming hardship.
The official music video for "Sitting on Top of the World" was released on 6 April 2012 on Vevo. It is set in various places in Melbourne, Australia. It is mostly a continuation on the ideas Goodrem used in the "A Little Too Late", "In This Life" and "Out of the Blue" music videos of her posing and dancing with her friends and playing her piano ...
Retirees enjoy more leisure time than any other age group. People between ages 65 and 74 have nearly seven hours of leisure time each day, and it jumps to over eight hours among those ages 75 and ...
Retirees enjoy seven to eight hours of leisure time per day, according to 2015 data from the American Time Use Survey.
Believe Again. " Believe Again " is a New Age and electronica -influenced pop song written by Delta Goodrem, Brian McFadden, Stuart Crichton and Tommy Lee James produced by Stuart Crichton and Marius de Vries for Goodrem's third studio album Delta (2007). The single, released in Australia on 8 December 2007, [1] features exclusive remixes and ...
With more free time and disposable income, retirees can embark on the epic adventures they’ve always imagined.” Retirement, Donovan said, isn’t the end of an active lifestyle.
Turn! Turn! "Turn! Turn! Turn!" " Set You Free This Time " is a song by the American folk rock group the Byrds, written by band member Gene Clark. It was first released in December 1965 on the group's Turn! Turn! Turn! album, [1] [2] and later issued as a single in January 1966.