"You Found Me is a tough song for me. It started from just a song with a lot of hate towards God. More of questions, "why" It's about the disappointment, the heartache, the let down that comes with life. Sometimes you're let down, sometimes you're the one who lets someone else down. It gets hard to know who you can trust, who you can count on. This song came out of a tough time, and I'm still right in the thick of it. There's some difficult circumstances my family and friends have been going through over the past year or so and can be overwhelming. It wears on me. It demands so much of my faith to keep believing, keep hoping in the unseen. Sometimes the tunnel has a light at the end, but usually they just look black as night. This song is about that feeling, and the hope that I still have, buried deep in my chest."
Said Issac Slade in an interview.
"I kept getting these phone calls from home - tragedy after tragedy... If there is some kind of Person in charge of this planet - are they sleeping? Smoking? Where are they? I just imagined running into God standing on a street corner like Bruce Springsteen, smoking a cigarette, and I'd have it out with Him."
"You Found Me," sung by The Fray.
It can go either way.
the fray is a band that wrote the smash hit song "you found me" I LOVE THE FRAYS!!!! :) hey, me too!!! i also love that song! I love that song, but i love 'how to save a life' more!! :)
It's about marriage. Joe and Isaac wrote it about Joe's wife.
where do the members of the fray live in Colorado?
You Found Me is on The Fray's second album, which is self-titled "The Fray".
the fray the fray
of Fray
The Fray.
While played on several movie trailers as well as promos for television shows, The Fray's song 'You Found Me' has not been featured on any movie soundtracks. You can find the song on The Fray's self-titled album, The Fray.
Please specify what your question is.
'you found me'
that nothing is impossible
of Fray, The skin which a deer frays from his horns.
The Fray..."You Found Me"
"You Found Me," sung by The Fray.
No, the word "afraid" is not derived from "fray." "Afraid" comes from Old English "a-," meaning "on," and "faran," meaning "to go," combining to form "a-faran," eventually evolving into "afraid" with the sense of feeling fear. "Fray" has a different origin, coming from Old French "freier," meaning "to disturb" or "frighten."