Please Don't Go may refer to:
"Please Don't Go" is the first single from Tank's long-awaited 2007 album Sex, Love & Pain. The single sat at #1 on the Billboard Adult R&B chart for more than six weeks. This song remained at #1 for 10 consecutive weeks on the Urban Adult Contemporary National Airplay Chart. On December 31, 2007, the music video for "Please Don't Go" appeared at number 94 on BET's Notarized: Top 100 Videos of 2007 countdown.
The official remix is called, "Please Don't Go (The TGT Remix)", and features TGT bandmates Ginuwine and Tyrese Gibson, this is TGT's first single as a group.
"Please Don't Go" is a song by American recording artist Mike Posner, released as the second single from his debut album 31 Minutes to Takeoff (2010). Posner co-wrote and co-produced the song with Benny Blanco, and J Records released the single to contemporary hit radio in the United States on June 9, 2010. The song peaked at number 16 on the Billboard Hot 100, giving Posner his second top 40 hit on that chart. It also peaked at numbers 9, 18 and 30 on the Mainstream Top 40, Rhythmic and Adult Top 40 charts respectively. It managed to peak within the top 40 in countries like Austria, Canada, Germany and New Zealand. A remix of the song features American rapper, Waka Flocka Flame.
Posner co-wrote and produced the song alongside Benny Blanco. Posner's lyrics plead for his girlfriend not to leave him, while his production with Blanco is uptempo and contains prominent synthpop and trance characteristics. In addition, Blanco provides background vocals in the chorus. The song was mixed by Serban Ghenea and engineered by John Hanes and Tim Roberts.
Don't Go may refer to:
Point of Entry is the seventh album from the British heavy metal band Judas Priest. It was released on 26 February 1981.
In 1980 Judas Priest garnered some airplay with "Breaking the Law" and "Living After Midnight" from their album British Steel. As a result the band pursued a more melodic, radio friendly direction on Point of Entry.
Following the conclusion of the British Steel World Tour, the band began work on their next project. By this time, they had sufficient funds to fly all their equipment to the huge, state-of-the-art Ibiza Studios in Spain. This gave Point Of Entry a louder, stronger, more "live" sound than previous Judas Priest albums.
Three singles were released from the album: "Heading Out to the Highway", "Don't Go" and "Hot Rockin'", all of which had accompanying music videos. The song "Heading Out to the Highway" has been a staple in live shows since its release, "Desert Plains" was regularly played throughout the 1980s and "Hot Rockin'" is still performed today. On the 2005 "Re-united" tour they also played "Solar Angels" on rare occasions: on the World Wide Blitz Tour of 1981 (supporting Point of Entry), it had been the opening song of every show.
"Don't Go (Girls and Boys)" was Fefe Dobson's fourth and final single from her debut album, released in July 2004. Although it did not appear on the initial release of Fefe Dobson, the song was appended to later pressings. The song is featured in a Tommy Hilfiger commercial that starred Dobson.
There is a version "For Promotional Use Only" sometimes referred to as a DJ single, with just the song and a brief "CALLOUT".
The music video for "Don't Go" was set in New York City, with references to subways, 43rd Street, and CBGB in both the song and video. The video starred Dobson and Drake Bell running away from two unidentified men in black suits and culminates with Dobson performing the song on-stage at CBGB.
Director: Rainbows & Vampires
Here Lies Love is a concept album and rock musical made in collaboration between David Byrne and Fatboy Slim, about the life of the former First Lady of the Philippines Imelda Marcos along with the woman who raised her—Estrella Cumpas—and follows Marcos until she and her family were forced to leave the Philippines. The album features 22 guest vocalists and was released on 6 April 2010, under Nonesuch Records and Todomundo in several formats, including a deluxe double-Compact Disc set with a DVD of music videos from the album and a 120-page book.
The album was adapted as a rock musical that premiered in 2013 off-Broadway at The Public Theater and ran again at the Public in 2014–2015. It also played at the Royal National Theatre's Dorfman Theatre in 2014–2015.
The title of the album is taken from a comment made by Imelda Marcos during a visit to her husband Ferdinand Marcos's embalmed body. Imelda Marcos expressed that she would like the phrase "Here Lies Love" to be inscribed on her tombstone.
Don't leave me now without a happy ending
Don't tell me now that it must fade away
For you must surely be
The one who waited for me
To take my hand and guide me every day
Don't go, oh, please don't go
With you, it always seemed to me like spring time
With you, I felt the magic everywhere
No matter where I go,
I only needed to know
The comfort of your love was always there
Don't go, oh, please don't go
I need you now and on the way
Through every hour and every day
Oh, please don't leave, I want you here
I can't believe the end is near
Don't go, oh, please don't go
To think I never dreamed that this could happen
For once, I put my faith so much in you
I thought your love was strong
But like a fool, I was wrong
The sense of emptiness, I never knew
Don't go, oh, please don't go
Don't tell me now that everything is over
I love you and that's all I'll ever know
Don't tell me it's goodbye
Don't leave my heart here to die
Don't leave me now, I beg you, please don't go