Candle (Sick and Tired)

"Candle (Sick and Tired)" is a pop rock song recorded by American band The White Tie Affair, released as the lead single from their debut album, Walk This Way. The video for this single features a guest appearance from Glee star Heather Morris as well as cameos from lonelygirl15 star Jessica Rose and Good Charlotte guitarist Benji Madden.

Track listings

iTunes - Remixes

  • "Candle (Sick and Tired)" [Johnny Vicious Club Remix] - 8:08
  • "Candle (Sick and Tired)" [Johnny Vicious Warehouse Vocal Mix] - 7:50
  • "Candle (Sick and Tired)" [Johnny Vicious Warehouse Dub Mix] - 6:49
  • "Candle (Sick and Tired)" [Johnny Vicious Radio Edit] - 4:09
  • "Candle (Sick and Tired)" [Razor and Guido Club Remix] - 7:29
  • "Candle (Sick and Tired)" [Razor and Guido Dub Mix] - 7:39
  • "Candle (Sick and Tired)" [Razor and Guido Radio Edit] - 3:47
  • Chart performance

    The song made its debut on The Billboard Hot 100 at number 93, and peaked at #57. It has peaked at number 3 on the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play.

    Chart positions

    Candle (Jason McCoy song)

    "Candle" is a single by Canadian country music artist Jason McCoy. Released in 1995, it was the sixth single from his album Jason McCoy. The song reached #1 on the RPM Country Tracks chart in March 1996.

    Content

    McCoy said that he wrote the song for his sister who was a single parent early in her life.

    Chart performance

    Year-end charts

    References

    Candle (disambiguation)

    A candle is a source of light, typically made of wax.

    Candle may also refer to:

    Places

  • Candle, Alaska
  • Candle Lake (Saskatchewan), Canada
  • Art, media, and entertainment

    Literature

  • Candle (novel), 2000 novel by John Barnes
  • Music

    Artists and labels

  • Candle (band), American Christian rock band
  • Candle Records, Australian record label
  • Albums and EPs

  • Candles (album), 1980 album by Heatwave
  • Candles (EP), a 2011 EP by Hey Monday
  • Songs

  • "Candle" (Jason McCoy song), 1995
  • "Candle (Sick and Tired)", 2008 song by The White Tie Affair
  • "Candle" (Skinny Puppy song), 1996
  • "Candle", a 1988 song by Sonic Youth from the album Daydream Nation
  • "Candles" (song), a song by Hey Monday
  • Enterprises

  • Center for the Advancement of Natural Discoveries using Light Emission (CANDLE), Synchrotron radiation facility project in Armenia
  • Candle Corporation, software company that was acquired by IBM
  • Measurement and timekeeping

  • Candle (unit), old unit of luminous intensity, now replaced by the SI unit candela
  • Advent candle
  • Candle clock
  • Slow (DJ)

    Slow or DJ Slow (born Vellu Maurola, 1975, in Vantaa, Finland) is a Finnish DJ and music producer. His first encounters with hip hop acts such as Run-DMC, Public Enemy and Eric B & Rakim led him to pursue career in DJing, later making music and remixing others tracks. Slow is known for his nu-jazz style and for his production of commercial music for high-profile projects for advertising, TV, and cinema.

    Career

    In the year 1990 Slow met JA-Jazz who was also a DJ and worked at the same department store's music department, where Slow worked. With money accrued from his evening job, Slow bought a pair of Technics turntables and good bunch of records.

    He participated in the Finnish DMC Mixing Championships and won the contest four years in a row: in 1992, 1993, 1994 and 1995. Winning performances were based on strong scratching skills, beatmatching and a little bit of acrobatics. Equipment used was two Technics SL-1200 direct-drive turntables and a DJ mixer and musical styles ranged from hip hop to funk and jazz.

    Slow (disambiguation)

    Slow, SLOW or Slowness may refer to:

    Music

  • Slow (band), a 1980s Canadian band
  • Slow (DJ) (born 1975), Finnish producer and DJ
  • Albums

  • Slow (Richie Kotzen album)
  • Slow, an album by Luna Sea
  • Slowness (album), an album by cantopop singer Kay Tse
  • Songs

  • "Slow" (Kylie Minogue song), 2003
  • "Slow" (Rumer song), 2010
  • "Slow", a song on the album Professional Murder Music by Professional Murder Music
  • Other uses

  • Slow, the speed of a moving body
  • South London Orienteers and Wayfarers (SLOW), an orienteering club
  • Slowness (novel), a 1993 novel by Milan Kundera
  • Slowness (seismology), a property of a seismic wave
  • See also

  • Slow movement (culture), a cultural movement that emphasizes a slower pace in a variety of lifestyle and social areas
  • Slow living, a lifestyle applying the Slow Movement philosophy
  • Tempo, the speed or pace of a piece of music
  • Velocity, the rate of change of position of a moving body
  • All pages beginning with "Slow"
  • Slowe (disambiguation)
  • Slough (disambiguation)
  • Sloe or Prunus spinosa, a plant
  • Slow (band)

    Slow is a Canadian punk rock band that started in the mid-1980s. Based in Vancouver, British Columbia, the band consisted of vocalist Thomas Anselmi, guitarists Christian Thorvaldson and Ziggy Sigmund, bassist Stephen Hamm and drummer Terry Russell.

    Hamm and Russell had previously been in a West Point Grey punk band called Chuck & the Fucks, playing an infamous concert at Queen Mary Elementary in the spring of 1980 where many of the teachers forced the children to leave.

    They recorded and released their debut single, "I Broke the Circle", in 1985 on Zulu Records, and followed up with the EP Against the Glass in 1986. The band's style was also cited as an influence on the nascent grunge rock movement in the nearby Seattle music scene, especially on its adoption of clothing styles such as flannel shirts, ripped jeans and heavy boots.

    Expo 86 show

    Slow are most famous for a controversial incident which both marred the Expo 86 festivities and effectively ended the band's career, when the band were invited to play at the event's Festival of Independent Recording Artists. According to Anselmi, the band's original idea was to simply appear on stage naked, run through the crowd to a boat on False Creek and then simply disappear without playing a note; however, the band ultimately chose to put on a more typical performance. Typical, that is, for Slow – the show included Anselmi pitching two two-by-fours into the front rows' empty seats at the side of the stage, and both Anselmi and Hamm followed through on the original idea to strip. Anselmi stripped off his shirt and jeans and performed in a pair of boxers, occasionally "poking through" the front as he adjusted his underwear; at the end of the set, Hamm dropped his shorts to his knees and, with arms raised in triumph, said goodbye to the audience while naked from the waist down. Expo officials cut the power to the pavilion, ending the band's set.

    Galore

    Galore may refer to:

  • Galore (Thumpers album), 2014
  • Galore (novel), a 2009 novel by Michael Crummey
  • Galore (Dragonette album), 2007
  • Galore (Kirsty MacColl album), 1995
  • Galore (The Cure album), 1997
  • Galore (The Primitives album), 1991
  • Galore, New South Wales, a village in Australia
  • See also

  • Galore Galore, an album by alternative rock band Sponge
  • Pussy Galore, a character from James Bond's novels
  • Podcasts:

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