This 2004 track hints at a past Kanye who was calmer, family orientated and less materialistic. Yes, really! But whether you believe the sentiment or not, it's a definitely a super-groovy slab of old-school Yeezy complete with his customary soul samples.

Whether you need some tunes to bust out at your next family reunion or just want to show a loved one how much you care, Billboard has rounded up the top 25 tracks that lay out the good, the bad and everything in between about familial relationships. Check out the list below.


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So, Which song should I dedicate to my family? If you are confused amongst the plethora of songs, here is a list of 22 beautiful songs about love, family, and togetherness that capture the essence of being part of a family and the joy that comes with it.

From love to togetherness, family is the center of our lives. There are many songs about families that celebrate the bonds between the members. No matter what the mood or message, there are sure to be family songs that resonate with every age group starting from kids to grandparents.

There are few things more joyful than spending time with family, and the perfect happy song about family captures that feeling perfectly. From upbeat anthems to heartwarming ballads, these songs express the happiness of being together.

Some popular family songs are light-hearted and fun, while others are sentimental and emotional. Whatever the specific subject matter, these songs can evoke strong emotions and offer a glimpse into the unique relationships that families share.

Rap, rock, and hip-hop are some of the most popular genres in music today and have been making family-focused factual statements lately. Family songs under such genres of music have become favorite songs with their relatable lyrics and upbeat tunes. Create a playlist of rock, pop, and R&B songs, provided below, to honor the unshakable relationships in your family.

Rock songs about family have a lot of energy and can be played any time of the day or night without disturbing anyone else in your home or office space. There are countless rock songs about family, but these two songs stand out:

So I signed up for the family plan. My trial ends on the 11th of September. I've made my playlist cultivated from my uploads public, however once I share the link with my family members (I tried via text, and via email) the playlist shows up, but says there are no songs - this is on the Android app as well as the iPhone app. Any help with this would be greatly appreciated!

I want to be able to play different songs on different Google minis in different rooms. I have created a Spotify family account where all family members have different Spotify accounts under the plan. But the minis seem linked in Google Home and won't allow separate songs to be played. I removed one device from my Google home and had my wife manage it from her Google home but still we can't play two different songs. Please help this is driving mad and shouldn't be this hard as must be a common scenario with kids in different rooms etc.

The only way to achieve this is for each of your family members to have their own Google account (one that is not a family link managed account), as well as their own Spotify account. Each speaker must be setup with the separate accounts, not setup with your account. If they're all setup with your account, you'll need to factory reset the speaker and set it up with a different account. More details from Spotify below.

I wanted to check if you still need help. Were you able to link each Spotify account to the Google Home app? Like what David_K has mentioned, each family member should have their own Google Account added in the Google Home app as a household member for them to link their own Spotify account. 


I have now finally sorted this. As stated above I had to set up separate Google and Spotify accounts (which is part of family premium plan). But importantly I had to factory reset one Google mini and then link that to an account other than mine (I used my wifes). So effectively one of our kids bedroom speakers is linked to mine and another to my wife's. They can both now play two different songs at the same time! All under the same Spotify family plan account. I can't believe how convoluted this was. Would expect this to be pretty common with kids having different music tastes. When my kids are past 13 and can have Google and Spotify accounts that don't appear under my Family Account app, then I guess we'll do this all again so speakers are linked to them individually with their playlists etc.

The song masterfully invokes nostalgia for the good and bad times through very relatable descriptions of family scenes. Meals, conversations, petty fights, and visiting family members in jail, just to name a few.

Using proceeds earned from Autumn, Stone set himself and his family up in Daly City, just outside of San Francisco. This is where the Family Stone band began to cohere in the mid 1960s and their first official release came on this single for the local Loadstone label. With its snappy, uptempo backbeat and layered vocal harmonies, the song now sounds like a prescient first draft for a style that would take full form on the group's later hits. "I Ain't Got Nobody" only made noise locally but it helped put the group on the radar of Epic Records who signed Sly and the Family Stone that same year.

"The things that were happening across the country changed us as people," said Freddy Stone in a 2013 interview with Wax Poetics. "We would begin having conversations amongst ourselves, and Sly being the genius that he is, he was putting these thoughts into songs." The album that came out of that moment, Stand!, absorbed the furious energies of the era's political and musical revolutions and spit back an LP so potent that more than half of its songs would end up being reissued just a year later on the group's Greatest Hits. "Everyday People" remains the group's pinnacle of that era, a flamboyantly utopian anthem about forging unity through difference. All that and Scooby Dooby Doo, ya'll.

They were the first vocal group to become country music stars, and were among the first groups to record commercially produced country music. Their first recordings were made in Bristol, Tennessee, for the Victor Talking Machine Company under producer Ralph Peer on August 1, 1927, the day before country singer Jimmie Rodgers also made his initial recordings for Victor under Peer. Their recordings of songs such as "Wabash Cannonball", "Can the Circle Be Unbroken", "Wildwood Flower", "Keep on the Sunny Side" and "I'm Thinking Tonight of My Blue Eyes" made these songs country standards. The tune of the last was used for Roy Acuff's "The Great Speckled Bird", Hank Thompson's "The Wild Side of Life" and Kitty Wells' "It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels", making the song a hit all over again in other incarnations.[1]

Throughout the group's career, Sara Carter sang lead vocals and played rhythm guitar or autoharp, and Maybelle sang harmony and played lead guitar. On some songs A.P. did not perform at all; on some songs he sang harmony and background vocals and occasionally he sang lead. Maybelle's distinctive guitar-playing style became a hallmark of the group, and her Carter Scratch (a method for playing both lead and rhythm on the guitar) has become one of the most copied styles of guitar playing. The group (in all its incarnations, see below) recorded for a number of companies, including RCA Victor, ARC group, Columbia, Okeh and various imprint labels.[2][3][4]

By the end of 1930, they had sold 300,000 records in the United States. Realizing that he would benefit financially with each new song he collected and copyrighted, A.P. traveled around the southwestern Virginia area in search of new songs; he also composed new songs. In the early 1930s, he befriended Lesley "Esley" Riddle, a black guitar player from Kingsport, Tennessee. Lesley accompanied A.P. on his song-collecting trips. In June 1931, the Carters did a recording session in Benton, Kentucky, along with Jimmie Rodgers. In 1933, Maybelle met the Speer Family at a fair in Ceredo, West Virginia, fell in love with their signature sound, and asked them to tour with the Carter Family.

As important to country music as the family's repertoire of songs was Maybelle's guitar playing. She developed her innovative guitar technique largely in isolation; her style is today widely known as the "Carter scratch" or "Carter Family picking". While Maybelle did use a flatpick on occasion, her major method of guitar playing was the use of her thumb (with a thumbpick) along with one or two fingers. What her guitar style accomplished was to allow her to play melody lines (on the low strings of the guitar) while still maintaining rhythm using her fingers, brushing across the higher strings.

Before the Carter family's recordings, the guitar was rarely used as a lead or solo instrument among musicians.[citation needed] Maybelle's interweaving of a melodic line on the bass strings with intermittent strums is now a staple of steel string guitar technique. Flatpickers such as Doc Watson, Clarence White and Norman Blake took flatpicking to a higher technical level, but all acknowledge Maybelle's playing as their inspiration.

The American Pops Orchestra presents "We Are Family: Songs of Hope and Unity." Join Maestro Luke Frazier, and a star-studded cast as they join together for an exciting evening of songs that bring us together.

Music is one of the most beneficial things you can introduce to kids. In fact, a 2016 study found that experiencing music in childhood can actually accelerate brain development, especially in the areas of language and reading skills. Not to mention that dancing along to music is a great mood booster and an excellent way for kids to exercise and have fun with the whole family. 17dc91bb1f

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