Download Free Mp3 Songs Of Hindi Movie Yes Boss

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Lihuel Harding

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Aug 20, 2024, 4:47:18 AM8/20/24
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Everybody (except us) hates their boss, but everyone wants to be the boss. The man at the top has been a whipping boy in music for decades, and there are plenty of nasty bosses who deserve a good thrashing in the songs below. But other songs describe bosses not just in terms of the working man, but in regards to marriage, politics, the mafia and even the music industry. Rarely popular but always powerful, bosses have inspired some of the most interesting songs around. See for yourself, in these Top 10 Songs About Bosses:

There's little question who rules the roost in the Rolling Stones. The band's frontman is not accustomed to taking lip from anyone. But when it comes to matters of physical pleasure, Mick Jagger is suddenly more willing to be subjugated. In the final, title song on his debut solo, the legendary lothario gets fooled by flattery into his present situation. Over a funky backdrop (aided by lead guitar from Jeff Beck), Jagger sings, "She's the boss in bed / She's the boss in my head." In the parlance of George Costanza, Mick has no "hand."

Download Free Mp3 Songs Of Hindi Movie Yes Boss


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Bluesman Jimmy Reed first recorded this disgruntled tune and Elvis Presley made it famous before the Grateful Dead featured the song on their 1971 live album. It's no surprise that the Dead stretch out Reed's taut blues into steady-rolling stunner. Plus, Jerry Garcia adds some extra hedonism to the working man's complaints: "You got me working, boss man / A-workin' around the clock / I want a drink of whiskey / You sure won't let me stop." In the original tune, Reed just wanted a boss that would let him rest at night. In the Dead's cover version, Garcia and his buddies want a boss that will let them get drunk.

The Heartbreakers' 1999 album was largely inspired by Petty's divorce and there's more than a hint of nastiness in the record's lead single. With the rampaging Heartbreakers behind him, Tom Petty fires one sarcastic barb after another in the direction of his ex -- as if to say that being married to the singer was the worst thing in the world. And yet, there's still some mystery here. In the second verse, he sneers, "I remember when he was your boss / I remember him touching your butt." Is Petty slyly calling himself her boss or could he be referencing memories of a potential extra-marital affair? It doesn't matter anymore. Bosses be damned, she's a free girl now.

So far, these bosses have been controlling taskmasters and ripe targets for harassment lawsuits. But on this track from David Bowie's surprise comeback, he pays tribute to his "boss" -- his wife Iman. Riding a mechanical rhythm and a wave of blood-red saxophone, Bowie sings of his devotion, praises his woman's beauty and marvels at their happiness together. He howls, "Who'd have ever thought of it? / Who'd have ever dreamed? / That a small town girl like you / Would be the boss of me." Getting bossed around doesn't sound so bad.

How can you have the Top 10 Songs About Bosses without a contribution from the Boss? Over the decades, Bruce Springsteen has often empathized with the plight of the working man. I suppose he does that on this 'Nebraska' stunner too, only the protagonist in 'Atlantic City' is a man who ends up working for a mob boss. The first line of the song references "Chicken Man" Philip Testa, an actual mafia boss who died in 1981 after a bomb was planted at his house. Sometimes, it's better not to be the boss.

Ten years after Eddie Cochran scored a hit with this ode to teen angst, Blue Cheer gained attention for their radically altered, metalicized cover. In the original version, the boss is a real drag -- making Eddie work the late shift instead of letting him go out on a date. In Blue Cheer's version, the boss is even more imposing, with the usual call-and-response replaced with call-and-thunderous-solo. The message is both loud and clear: Work sucks and bosses are even worse.

There's little question who rules the roost in the Rolling Stones. The band's frontman is not accustomed to taking lip from anyone. But when it comes to matters of physical pleasure, Mick Jagger is suddenly more willing to be subjugated. In the final, title song on his debut solo, the legendary lothario gets fooled by flattery into his present situation. Over a funky backdrop (aided by lead guitar from Jeff Beck), Jagger sings, \"She's the boss in bed / She's the boss in my head.\" In the parlance of George Costanza, Mick has no \"hand.\"

Bluesman Jimmy Reed first recorded this disgruntled tune and Elvis Presley made it famous before the Grateful Dead featured the song on their 1971 live album. It's no surprise that the Dead stretch out Reed's taut blues into steady-rolling stunner. Plus, Jerry Garcia adds some extra hedonism to the working man's complaints: \"You got me working, boss man / A-workin' around the clock / I want a drink of whiskey / You sure won't let me stop.\" In the original tune, Reed just wanted a boss that would let him rest at night. In the Dead's cover version, Garcia and his buddies want a boss that will let them get drunk.

The Heartbreakers' 1999 album was largely inspired by Petty's divorce and there's more than a hint of nastiness in the record's lead single. With the rampaging Heartbreakers behind him, Tom Petty fires one sarcastic barb after another in the direction of his ex -- as if to say that being married to the singer was the worst thing in the world. And yet, there's still some mystery here. In the second verse, he sneers, \"I remember when he was your boss / I remember him touching your butt.\" Is Petty slyly calling himself her boss or could he be referencing memories of a potential extra-marital affair? It doesn't matter anymore. Bosses be damned, she's a free girl now.

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