Eagle‐Eye Cherry Lyrics — by Popularity
72 songs · Page 2 of 2
| 51 | Drunk and Sublime |
| 52 | Falling in Love Again |
| 53 | Hate To Love |
| 54 | House at the End of the Road |
| 55 | I Like It |
| 56 | Miss Fortune |
| 57 | Mother Never Told Me |
| 58 | Permanent Tears |
| 59 | Remember to Breathe |
| 60 | Rise Above |
| 61 | Rising Sun |
| 62 | Save Tonight (2018 Rendition) |
| 63 | Skull Tattoo |
| 64 | Streets of You |
| 65 | Top of the World |
| 66 | Up To You |
| 67 | We Ain't Dead |
| 68 | When Mermaids Cry |
| 69 | When Mermaids Cry (radio edit) |
| 70 | While Away |
| 71 | Wishing It Was |
| 72 | You |
Eagle‐Eye Cherry Albums
Singles
About Eagle‐Eye Cherry
Eagle Eye Cherry is a Swedish-American singer-songwriter who emerged from Stockholm's vibrant music scene to craft a distinctive blend of alternative rock and pop that captured the melancholic spirit of the late 1990s. The son of jazz trumpeter Don Cherry and half-brother to Neneh Cherry, he inherited a musical DNA that he channeled into deeply introspective songs built around his warm, gravelly vocals and atmospheric guitar work. His breakthrough hit "Save Tonight" (1997) became a global phenomenon with its bittersweet melody and existential lyrics about fleeting moments, establishing him as a master of emotionally resonant pop that felt both intimate and universal. Albums like "Desireless" showcased his ability to weave together folk-influenced storytelling with modern production, creating a sound that was both timeless and distinctly '90s. Songs like "Falling in Love Again" and "Are You Still Having Fun?" revealed an artist unafraid to explore themes of love, loss, and self-reflection with a vulnerability that resonated across cultural boundaries. While his commercial peak came in the late '90s, Cherry's continued output through albums like "Living in the Present Future" demonstrates an artistic evolution toward more experimental textures while maintaining the emotional honesty that made him a defining voice of alternative pop's golden era. His cultural impact extends beyond chart success, as he helped bridge the gap between American alternative rock and European sensibilities, influencing a generation of singer-songwriters who valued emotional depth over commercial polish.