Unfortunately no. You can however make a parody of that song title. And you might be able to if the song title is a generic word.
Even the titles of creative works are copyrighted and protected under copyright laws. If you use any part of a song, the title, lyrics, etc. in naming your band, you can be charged with copyright infringement.
Honestly i think you can.
Sure. It is still necessary to distinguish the text as a title of a work. The quotation marks do that. The fact that the song title uses parentheses or that you have used the song title in a parenthetical expression does not matter. Use the quotes to identify it as a song title.
Italics(:
Song titles don't necessarily follow normal grammatical rules. An artist can decide to use a question mark or not. If you are referencing a song title then you should check what the artist uses for the title.
Do you know what you will be naming the baby?
== == == == The more common use is to italicize the title, but you can underline it if you wish. Italicizing is preferred and more common. According to Wikipedia's naming conventions, you underline or italicize the title of a film. However, this convention is not standard practice in major periodicals and newspapers, where it is correct to place double quotation marks around movie titles.
Surround the song title with quote marks, like "The Sound of Music," or you can use italics like The Sound of Music.
You can't do that in Windows Movie Maker. Sorry.
Register for an account, search for the song using the artist or the song title as a criteria and get the codes for pasting into the HTML of your website.
The way to get titles for your writing is to finish the writing first. Then, titles will come to you based on what you have written. Most song titles come from something in the song or from a person's name. Write the song, then use part of a line as your title.
Yes you can. lots of people have done it. Eddie Van Halen, Flo Rida, and Nelly Furtado all have a song called Jump. You can use a title for a song that is already used as long as it is not the same song someone already made or if it is a remake.