"Tonight, Tonight, Tonight" is the second track on the 1986 album Invisible Touch by Genesis. It peaked at No. 3 in the U.S. and No. 18 in the UK as the fourth single from the album. The working title was "Monkey, Zulu".
The single included an edited version (at 4:32) and the first part of "Domino" ("In the Glow of the Night") as the B-side. A new edit of the single version was released on the 1999 compilation Turn It On Again: The Hits (as well as its "sequel" The Tour Edition) and later on The Platinum Collection. This revised edit features a different cross fade and different edit points as compared to the original 1987 edit version. Some singles that included the full version of the song included the second part of "Domino" ("The Last Domino") as the B-side. Other releases contained the song "Paperlate" and a 12" remix of "Tonight, Tonight, Tonight". The full live version from the Live at Wembley Stadium video was included as a B-side on the "Tell Me Why" CD single.
Tonight Tonight may refer to:
"Tonight Tonight" is a song by American pop rock band Hot Chelle Rae. It was released as the lead single from their second album Whatever on March 15, 2011. It has been certified double platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America, and has sold over 3 million copies as of April 2013.
"Tonight Tonight" is written in the key of E major, with the vocal range spanning from D♯4 to B5.
"Tonight Tonight" was received well by critics, with Carolyn Giannini of The Sacramento Press saying that it had "summer anthem potential" and Brian Mansfield of USA Today saying it had "the makings of one of the catchiest pop-rock anthems of the summer."
"Tonight Tonight" has appeared on several different music charts in the United States, reaching number seven on the Billboard Hot 100 in July 2011. It also reached number five on the Pop Songs chart and number four on the Hot Digital Songs chart. In Canada, the song reached number ten on the Canadian Hot 100.
"Tonight, Tonight" is a song by American alternative rock band The Smashing Pumpkins, written by the band's frontman, Billy Corgan. It was the third single and second track on the first disc from their third album, Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness, and was released in April 1996 in Europe and later in June 1996 in the United States. "Tonight, Tonight" was critically acclaimed and commercially well-received upon its release. The music video accompanying the song was also successful and won several awards.
A shorter acoustic version of the song, titled "Tonite Reprise", was included as a B-side to the single and on the triple LP version of Mellon Collie. This single also later appeared in an extended form on the box set The Aeroplane Flies High. Additionally, the song appears on the band's greatest hits release, Rotten Apples.
Billy Corgan began writing for the follow-up to Siamese Dream after the tour in support of that album; however, the recording of "Tonight, Tonight" first began while the Pumpkins were still on the Siamese Dream tour when Corgan booked the band into a local Chicago studio to record all of their song ideas on tape.
Why breathe one more time? My lips pressed to the sky. I see it fall, come crashing down on my head and I am scared tonight.
Why'd it have to be, ordinary me? I've been chosen to lift the world on my back (weighted down).
Still grasping, for footing. A stepping stone to lift ourselves up, above this. We are searching for the cure tonight.
Why'd it have to be, ordinary me? I've been chosen to lift the world on my back (weighted down).
I wish that we, would never ever see. The end of days like these, now I know I'm in love