Everything's Gonna Be Alright (Sweetbox Song)

Everything's Gonna Be Alright (Sweetbox Song)

"Everything's Gonna Be Alright" is the title of a song by German group Sweetbox. It was released in September 1997 as the second single from the album Sweetbox, the only album that had Tina Harris as the group's frontwoman. The song is based on Air on the G string from Suite No. 3 by Johann Sebastian Bach.

"Everything's Gonna Be Alright" is the most successful song of Sweetbox worldwide. It reached top 10 on the Austrian, Belgian, British, Colombian, Finnish, French, Irish, Israeli, Italian, Lebanese, Norwegian, Spanish, Swedish and Swiss charts; reached top 20 in Denmark, Germany and the Netherlands and No. 46 in the US.

In 2005, Jade Villalon, then frontwoman of Sweetbox covered the song; one of her versions, titled "Everything's Gonna Be Alright -Reborn-" was released to promote the compilation album Best of Sweetbox. The song features the singer Toby Breitenbach.

In 2009, the new frontwoman Jamie Pineda recorded a version of the song to put on her first Sweetbox album, entitled The Next Generation. This version includes new verses and male vocalist/producer Derek Bramble on the track. Yasutaka Nakata remixed the song as a bonus track for the album.

In 2011, the song was included in the soundtrack of the Japanese movie Paradise kiss. In particular, it was used in the scene of Yukari's parade.


Read more about Everything's Gonna Be Alright (Sweetbox Song):  Track Listing, Official Remixes, Chart Positions

Famous quotes containing the words gonna and/or alright:

    Who’s gonna take me seriously with this on my head?
    Leanza Corbett (b. c. 1973)

    The question mark is alright when it is all alone when it
    is used as a brand on cattle or when it could be used
    in decoration but connected with writing it is
    completely entirely completely uninteresting.... A
    question is a question, anybody can know that a
    question is a question and so why add to it the
    question mark when it is already there when the
    question is already there in the writing.
    Gertrude Stein (1874–1946)