You’d think that there are not many songs with a title that often was called “the worst title for a song” but in fact, there are a number of other bands who used it from American blues king Memphis Slim through April White, Canadian rock band, or Turbonegro a Norwegian deathpunk band just to mention a few extreme examples. Knew the truth but still she looked me in the eyes and liedīut she never never left my, never never left my mindĪnd make sure you say I lost my way without her See she was born to leave this town behind They say you love someone enough you gotta set them free ![]() ![]() Make sure you say I’m sweet FA without herĪt how it truly broke my heart to have to watch her leaveīut she was torn between what she wants and what she needs She said I Won the battle but I lost the war Tony McGuinness originally played bass with The Script. So rather than someone sitting down on the internet and surfing it on their own, they actually feel like “I’m from China, and I’ve got the chance to comment on this European band’s album”. The fact that you care about what people think. They feel like they really had a hand in getting it there, which they did. We threw a verse and a chorus up online, and people went “it’s deadly, it’d be great if it went this way, or that way”…it was a great A&R process because they feel like they own the song. “’If You See Kay’, a song on the first album, was directly given birth to that way. In a BBC article Danny was cited about how they keep in touch with their audience and he brought up this track as an example to direct involvement between band and fans: Glen added: “And people went nuts for that song” We just sang a verse bridge and a chorus one evening just to see if people liked it, was it a song they thought we should be pursuing.” ![]() “We just jammed on MySpace one night, had a great idea. In an interview from 2009 Mark talked about how the song was born and tested at the same time: Written by: Tony McGuinness, Danny O’Donoghue, Mark Sheehan And you guessed it right, they wrote a song about it. Once upon a time The Script lost a girl, code-named “Kay”.
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