Released: February 17, 2004

Songwriter: David Bowie Stevie Wonder Martin Blasick

Producer: Martin Blasick

[Don't Move On:]
You brought me to the highest Mountain
Out of my, deep despair
And you don't know how much I need you
To stand beside you
To breath your air

Don't move on
Don't move on
Don't move
Don't move
Don't move
Don't move on

[Living For The City:]
This girl, she works
In downtown New York City
Surrounded by
Four walls that ain't so pretty
Her parents give
Her love and affection
To keep her strong
Movin' in the right direction

Livin' just enough
Just enough
For the city

Livin' just enough
For the city
Livin' just enough
Livin' for the city

[Changes:]
So I turned myself to face me
But I've never caught a glimpse
Of how the others must see the faker
Well I'm much too fast to take that test

(Ch-ch-ch-ch-changes)
Turn and face the strange
(Ch-ch-changes)
Just gonna have to be a different girl
Time may change me
But I can't trace time

Lindsay Lohan

Lindsay Lohan (born July 2, 1986) is an American actress, singer and songwriter. Lindsay entered the world of show business at the tender age of three as a Ford model, which led to several television commercials. She did more television work as she grew up, including Disney Channel movies. Lindsay’s Disney connection, which included starring as the twins in a remake of The Parent Trap, continued into her teens and helped her expand her career into along with co-starring with Jamie Lee Curtis in 2003’s Freaky Friday, she also performed the movie’s closing song, “Ultimate”. The following year, Lindsay starred in Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen and contributed four songs to its soundtrack.

Buoyed by these successes as well as her starring role in Mean Girls, Lindsay hosted the 2004 MTV Movie Awards and won an award for Female Breakout Star. She also signed to Tommy Mottola’s Casablanca Records, releasing an aptly-titled lead single “Rumors” to her debut album, Speak, in December of 2004, with the full-length receiving a Platinum certification in the United States. The next year saw celebrity start to catch up with Lindsay after she become the ultimate Hollywood tabloid magnet. While she continued her relationship with Disney, filming a remake of Fully Loaded, Internet and tabloid rumors spread about everything from her health and love life to her late-night party habits.

By the end of 2005, Lindsay’s persona as the wild and damaged teen siren – whatever its ratio of truth to fiction – had outshone her accomplishments as an actress and a singer. And it was into this caustic tabloid climate that she released her Gold-certified second album, A Little More Personal (Raw), which featured “Confessions of a Broken Heart (Daughter to Father)” – a letter to her father addressing his alcoholism and domestic abuse. Later that year, Lindsay was switched from Casablanca to Motown Records by Universal Music Group. Though she focused more on her film career in 2006 and 2007 (co-starring with the likes of Meryl Streep, Lily Tomlin and Jane Fonda) and continued to have a swirl of tabloid attention and media controversy around her, she planned work on a third album that never materialized, releasing a single “Bossy” produced by Ne-Yo and Stargate in 2008, which topped the US Dance chart.