"Let Go" is the first single from Megan Rochell's unreleased solo album, You, Me and the Radio and peaked at number 34 on Billboard magazine's Rhythmic Top 40 chart.
"Let Go" is the third single by the American Christian rock band Red on their debut full-length studio album End of Silence. The song was written by Rob Graves, Jasen Rauch and Jason McArthur.
Let Go is the second release by American melodic hardcore band Hundredth. It was released on September 27, 2011 through Mediaskare Records. Live Today was the first single from the record, and was released on YouTube on July 22, 2011.
Voted 'Best Hardcore Album' by public vote on MediaSkare.
Rahul Sharma may refer to:
Rahul Sharma is an Indian businessman and the co-founder of Micromax Informatics.
Sharma holds a Bachelor of Commerce degree from the University of Saskatchewan. He also has a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering from Rashtrasant Tukadoji Maharaj Nagpur University.
Rahul Sharma has been Vice President of Marketing and Internet Channel at MobileWave Group PLC (Fieldbury PLC) since June 13, 2007. Sharma co-founded Micromax Informatics Limited, served as its managing director starting in March 2000, and currently serves as its Chief Executive Officer and Executive Director of Product Strategy and Channel Sales since April 1, 2007.
Sharma is married to film actor Asin.
Rahul Sharma is an Indian Police Service (IPS) officer of the Gujarat cadre. He was inducted into the service in 1992. He played a crucial role in policing operations during the 2002 Gujarat riots. He was seconded to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) in 2004, and served there for the next three years. He presently serves as the DIG (armed unit) at Rajkot, Gujarat.
Rahul Sharma received a Bachelor of Technology degree in Electrical Engineering from the prestigious Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur (IIT-K) in 1987. He also has a degree in law. He joined the Indian Police Service in 1992.
When the 2002 Gujarat riots broke out on 28 February 2002, Sharma was the Superintendent of Police (SP) in Bhavnagar district, heading a 180-strong police force. He became widely known as one of the few district police chiefs to have "responded vigorously" to control the violence.
On the third day of the violence (2 March), a mob of about 10,000 people tried to set fire to a madrasa on the outskirts of Bhavnagar, a residential Muslim school sheltering 400 students. Sharma issued orders to open fire on the mob, causing injuries and some fatalities, thereby dispersing the mob and averting a disaster. Subsequently, he transferred the children to a safer location inside the city. His timely action was praised by L. K. Advani, the then Union Home Minister, in India's Parliament as well as in his autobiography. On the other hand, Narendra Modi, the then Chief Minister of Gujarat, was angry, according to Kingshuk Nag, complaining that he was "trying to seek cheap publicity and act like a hero."
Hey, I'll move out of the way for you
Hey, I'll move out of the way for her too
I never thought we'd end up here in separate cages
It doesn't go like this, you've left out some pages
Hey, when was the last time you laughed
And did you mean it when you did?
I'm just wondering, the sound in your voice it's abounding
It's astounding how you live so close to your cure
I never know what to do with my love
I never know what to do with my hands
So I'll put them behind my back
I'll put them behind my back
Behind my back
Hey, don't you know what I mean when I say
Hey, see it in my face, I'm breaking
I've waited for so long just to know
That you'd wrap yourself around me if you couldn't let go
I never know what to do with my love
I never know what to do with my hands
So I'll put them behind my back
(Put them behind my back)
I'll put them behind my back
(Behind my back)
Behind my back
(Put them behind my back)
Can I move out of the way tomorrow?