If You Leave - Nada Surf BEST
"If You Leave" is the group's highest-charting single on the US Billboard Hot 100, where it reached number 4 in May 1986. The song was also a Top 5 entry in Canada and New Zealand, and charted at number 15 in Australia. A defining track of the 1980s, it was described by Interview as "one of the most influential, zeitgeist-capturing songs ever to be written".
if you leave - nada surf
In 2016, Entertainment Weekly journalist Dana Falcone described "If You Leave" as a "now-classic tune" and "OMD's best-known song to Americans".[15] Kevin Wuench of the Tampa Bay Times dubbed the track "a signature song of the '80s that will never leave the radio",[16] while Interview called it "one of the most influential, zeitgeist-capturing songs ever to be written".[17] The track has been included in various "greatest songs" listings;[a] KOOL-FM named it the third-best new wave song of the 1980s,[18] while Time Out ranked it the 10th greatest track of 1980s cinema.[19] KROQ positioned "If You Leave" as the 16th-best song of 1986;[20] in a poll of 6,528 Slicing Up Eyeballs readers, it was voted the fifth-greatest song of the year.[21]
Last week we posted "9 of the best '90s bands you didn't think were the best '90s bands and the awesome stuff they're doing now," and encouraged you guys to leave comments of who you think we should have included and who we should have left off. There are so many more than 9 bands who could've fit on that list, and we loved everyone's suggestions. A few of them were bands we strongly considered but left off the list for one reason or another. That includes Failure (whose reunion we covered a bunch), Local H (who we also cover a lot), Spacehog, and the band who was suggested the most: Nada Surf. Nada Surf is actually the band that most likely would have been our tenth pick, had we included ten picks, but we decided to leave them off. Here's why.
Last week we posted \"9 of the best '90s bands you didn't think were the best '90s bands and the awesome stuff they're doing now,\" and encouraged you guys to leave comments of who you think we should have included and who we should have left off...\nRead More
There is nothing like listening to "California" by Phantom Planet every time the intro shows up, but it is worth remembering the first time the song was ever played in the series. When Ryan (Ben McKenzie) leaves prison and returns to his house in Chino, he picks a fight with his mom's boyfriend and is eventually kicked out of the home. With nowhere else to crash for the night, he decides to dial the lawyer who was assigned to him in prison, Sandy's (Peter Gallagher), phone number. Little did he know that the Cohen family would welcome him with open arms and his life would be changed for the better. The song perfectly foreshadows the life awaiting Ryan in The O.C.
Despite the show's vibe shifting drastically in Season 4 to the point that it got canceled, it did have a promising intro. Long before Stranger Things made Kate Bush's original "Running Up That Hill" resurface in the music charts, it was used in the first scene of Season 4's first episode. Following Marissa's death, Ryan flees the Cohens' household and ends up living and working at a bar. When Sandy tries to find him and bring him back home, Ryan goes away to meet Julie at a motel and plot a revenge scheme for Volchok. Seeing the side effects from Marissa's passing in both of these characters when Placebo's cover is playing in the back made the scene a realistic portrayal of grief.
If you leave, I won't cryI won't waste a single dayBut if you leave, don't look backI'll be running the other waySeven years went under the bridgeLike time was standing stillHeaven knows what happens nowYou've gotta say you will
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