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66 Mother’s Day Songs: A Playlist Of Classic Songs About Moms

Illustration for songs about moms for mother's day playlists

Looking for Mother’s Day songs for your playlist? We’ve got you covered. There’s never a bad time to celebrate mothers – and the songs that have celebrated them. Mothers take all kinds of different forms, so we’ve included songs from different perspectives, but – generally speaking – there’s plenty of evidence here that nothing makes a tough rocker or rapper get sentimental more than songs about moms.

Brandi Carlile: The Mother

For Mother’s Day, Brandi Carlisle gave the world a song that was both personal and universal. It’s specifically about her daughter Evangeline, whose name and personal details are right there in the lyrics, but women everywhere will likely recognize the experiences she sings about, starting with “The first things that she took from me were selfishness and sleep.”

Kacey Musgraves: Mother

One of the sweetest songs ever written on acid (by Kacey Musgraves’ own admission), “Mother” is simple as it gets – voice, piano, revealing lyric – and it’s less about mothers than about one of those vulnerable moments when only one person could understand. A perfect Mother’s Day song, even if you don’t know the backstory.

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Justin Bieber: Turn to Me (Mother’s Day Dedication)

This stand-alone single was part of Justin Bieber’s transition from teen idol to grown-up hitmaker, and the lyric salutes his mother in grown-up terms: The lyric notes that he’s the same age she was when she had him, old enough to understand the sacrifices she made.

The Backstreet Boys: The Perfect Fan

The Backstreet Boys closed out their smash Millennium album by thanking their mothers who got them to where they are. The words are warm and sentimental, and the music pulls out all the stops, with its gospel choir and hand-clapping finale. On an album full of splashy hit ballads, they made sure Mom got the splashiest.

The Lonely Island: Motherlover

Consisting of cast members and staff writers from much-loved U.S. late night variety show Saturday Night Live, The Lonely Island first collaborated with Justin Timberlake on the spoof Christmas song “Dick In A Box” in 2006. Four years later, the two parties again worked together on “Motherlover”: one of the more controversial songs on this list which imagines Timberlake and The Lonely Island’s Andy Shamberg celebrating Mother’s Day by (ahem) sharing intimacies with each other’s mothers (played by Patricia Clarkson and Susan Sarandon in the song’s surreal promo video).

Sugarland: Mother

Despite its obvious Mother’s Day associations, Sugarland’s “Mother” wasn’t chosen as a single from country duo Sugarland’s recent album, 2018’s Bigger. Nonetheless, it remains a plaintive and beautifully-executed ode to maternal love (“There’s nothing she won’t do for you/As long as she’s alive you’re not alone”) and its inclusion is surely mandatory here.

Queen Naija: Mama’s Hand

Celebrating the unique unconditional state of a mother’s love, Queen Naija’s “Mama’s Hand” was written directly in tribute to her son. Holding nothing back, this emotive ballad – a highlight of Queen Naija’s self-titled 2018 EP – finds the Michigan-born singer pledging to give her boy “everything I have” and urges him to think big as “there’s not a dream in this world you can’t accomplish or grasp.”

Will.i.am: I Got It From My Mama

“I Got It From My Mama” was first released as the trailer single from ex-Black Eyed Peas’ mainstay Will.i.am’s third solo album, 2007’s Songs About Girls. In effect a tribute to the way good looks can often be handed down to a girl from her mother’s genetics (“Tell me where you got your body from?/I got it from my mama!”), this funky, feisty and suggestive song celebrates both motherhood and the eternal beauty of the female form.

Florence + The Machine: Mother

After the big, widescreen productions dominating her band’s first two albums, Lungs and Ceremonials, Florence Welch stripped her music back on 2015’s How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful: a confessional record dealing with personal conflicts and struggles. Typical of its material, the cathartic “Mother” finds Welch seeking the guidance only a mom can provide and imploring “Mother make me a bird of prey/So I can rise above this, let it fall away.”

Listen to the best Mother’s Day songs on our celebratory playlist.

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Scissor Sisters: Take Your Mama

A song capturing a mother’s unconditional love from a different angle, Scissor Sisters’ 2004 hit “Take Your Mama” was inspired by frontman Jake Shears coming out as gay to his mother, with whom he was always especially close. Shears’ lyric documents him introducing his mom to the activities of gay nightlife as part of their bonding process following his coming out (“Take your mama out all night/Show her what it’s all about”), but the music’s Rolling Stones-esque groove and upbeat feel-good factor mean “Take Your Mama” is simply a great rock song however the listener chooses to interpret it.

Etta James: Tell Mama

“Tell Mama” was originally titled “Tell Daddy” and became a Billboard R&B Chart hit for one of its co-writers, Clarence Carter. However, it connected with a much wider audience when its gender was reversed and Etta James recorded it as the maternally-inclined “Tell Mama” for the album of the same name in 1968. The song went on to provide James with her biggest-ever Billboard chart hit (No. 23) and that’s wholly appropriate for she puts her very heart and soul into this Southern soul stunner which will always rank among her greatest performances.

Tracy Bonham: Mother Mother

A feisty, Liz Phair-esque workout from her 1996 debut The Burdens Of Being Upright, Tracy Bonham’s signature hit “Mother Mother” has often been misconstrued as an angry, anti-maternal song. However, despite her vocal delivery (which rises to a scream as the song’s chorus kicks in), Bonham has stressed the song is simply an empathetic discourse about the awkward phone calls home most young people make when they try to persuade their moms that life is working out fine – often when it isn’t in reality. In an interview with Songfacts, she said “”It’s not an angry, ‘I hate you, Mom’ song, which a lot of people misunderstood it to be. It was just like, ‘Yeah, Mom, life is hard.’”

Reba McEntire: He Gets That From Me

Reba McEntire’s wistful “He Gets That From Me” initially captures a mother describing her own traits she sees in her son (“His curly hair and his knobby knees/The way the sun brings those freckles out”). However, it has a sting in the tail, as its latter verses describe the traits the boy’s late father – who it transpires has passed away – has also passed down to him. Tender and touching, “He Gets That From Me” stayed on Billboard’s Country Chart for 30 weeks straight and that’s no surprise as it can melt the hardest of hearts.

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Donna Murphy: Mother Knows Best

While Rapunzel’s mother in Tangled was quite the villain, “Mother Knows Best” is all about moms knowing what their child deserves. Though the fairytale princess didn’t listen to Mother Gothel (Donna Murphy), the song is perfect for the “told you so” moment that mothers experience with their children. – Jacklyn Krol

Lenny Kravitz: Always on the Run

Lenny Kravitz’s mother appears to be a regular well of good advice. In this funky tune, she tells him to get home early, never take more than your share and, by the way, don’t do heroin.

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Meghan Trainor featuring Kelli Trainor: Mom

While all these artists sang to their mothers, Meghan Trainor went the extra mile and put hers on the record – not singing but chatting on the phone. On the recording, Kelli Trainor sounds every bit as wonderful as the song claims she is, and it was enough to give her a few moments of internet stardom.

Jamie O’Neal: Somebody’s Hero

This 2005 hit isn’t about the singer’s own family, but a salute to the mothers of the world – especially the ones who sacrifice big dreams to raise daughters. Jamie O’Neil sings of the mother’s heroic moment in letting go of her daughter when she gets married, and then the daughter’s own heroism in tending to her mother when she’s aged. That’s a lot of real-life detail to fit into a three-minute country song.

Taylor Swift: The Best Day

Even on her early albums, Taylor Swift was especially good at grabbing those little details that tell a bigger story. This Fearless track explores the mother-daughter bond through a couple of strong memories, including mom’s consolation after a tough day at school. The recent “Taylor’s version”: adds some new resonance by telling the story in her deeper adult voice.

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Martina McBride: In My Daughter’s Eyes

Country music is full of loving odes to mom, but none can match the deep sentiments of this one from a mom to her daughter (and a dad to his, since James Slater wrote it). No mother-daughter squabbles here, just the singer’s testimony on the transforming power of her daughter’s love. McBride’s heartfelt vocal made this a rare country smash with no guitars or drums.

The Spice Girls: Mama

Behind the Spice Girls’ usual exuberance is a grown-up song about motherhood, with the singers admitting that they also fought with their moms in younger days, but came to respect them as mentors and friends. Girl power at its finest.

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Ismael Miranda: Madre

This mid-70s salsa classic shows how intense the lyrics could get behind those ebullient grooves. If you didn’t speak Spanish or have a translation at hand, you’d figure he was just declaring his love for his mother. But he’s really despairing over her having passed away, and saying he’d give up his life if it meant he could see her again.

Bob Seger: Momma

True to form, Bob Seger’s song about moms is honest and unvarnished; this track (from his pre-Night Moves stardom days) allows that their relationship wasn’t smooth. But it comes back to the chorus of “Momma, she never told me a lie,” making that the highest praise you can give.

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Blake Shelton: The Baby

If the Martina McBride song doesn’t get you tearing up, this one will. It’s the twist at the end that does it, as the singer rushes to meet his dying mom and cries like a baby when he doesn’t make it. This one had the whole country weeping when it topped the country charts in 2003.

Goldie: Mother

Not all songs about moms are warm and fuzzy, some people need time to get their feelings out. Goldie’s ode to his missing mom (who turned him over to foster care when he was young) runs a full hour and takes up most of the first CD of his controversially epic Saturnz Return. It practically takes in the entire history of music from classical to jungle, with the drums not entering for 20 minutes.

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Sufjan Stevens: Decatur, or, Round of Applause for Your Stepmother!

You wouldn’t expect a straightforward Mother’s Day song on Sufjan Stevens’ surreal journey through his Illinois album. What you get is this delightfully hummable tune full of rhymes and narrative twists, starting with the lyric’s mentioning “our” stepmom, not “yours.” You do however learn that you’ll regret hating your stepmother the minute you see her getting carried away by kangaroos.

Liz Phair: Little Digger

Liz Phair’s self-titled fourth album includes her most honest song about motherhood – specifically about her son’s conflicted reaction when she starts dating post-divorce. The chorus hook, “My mother is mine,” is one of her most haunting.

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Betty Noyes – Baby Mine

Betty Noyes’ “Baby Mine” from Dubmo simply showcases what mothers feel for their babies. Its powerful message and performance earned it a place on the AFI list of greatest songs in film. In 2019, meanwhile, Arcade Fire gave the song an exciting update for the live-action version of the movie. – Jacklyn Krol

Christina Aguilera: Oh Mother

Christina Aguilera’s “Oh Mother” ventures into riskier territory, dealing with her own memories of growing up with an abusive father. It celebrates her mother having the strength to walk out after realizing she deserved better and bears out the stronger mother-daughter bond that resulted. Aguilera emotes the song for all it’s worth, delivering what may be the strongest performance on the jazz-infused Back to Basics album.

Beyoncé: Ring Off

Modern pop’s other great divorced-mother song. Unlike Xtina’s song, the marriage here isn’t abusive – it’s just gone south, and now the mom holds out for a love that isn’t being returned. She decided she’s had enough, off goes the ring and daughter Beyoncé celebrates with a hot dance track. The shouts of “so sexy!” suggest mom has more good times ahead.

Genesis: Mama

Let’s get the most dysfunctional Mother’s Day song out of the way first. In this stellar bit of pop- noir, a young man works through some deep-seated Oedipal issues through his relationship with a prostitute. It’s possibly the most dramatic vocal Phil Collins ever cut for Genesis.

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Carole King & Louise Goffin: Where You Lead

This key Tapestry track wasn’t originally a mother-daughter song, but the producers of television’s Gilmore Girls heard it that way. Carole King was glad to oblige and called in original collaborator Toni Stern to revise the lyrics and enlisted her daughter Louise Goffin (also an established singer-songwriter) to do the duet. It remains a timeless song of devotion, whoever it’s sung to.

Drake: You & The 6

Drake wrote two songs dedicated to his mother: “You & The 6” and “Look What You’ve Done,” which both make the same point: He may be a bad boy, but he’d be much worse if his mother hadn’t kept him relatively on the straight and narrow. The rapper puts it all out there – owning up to his vices of booze, women, and other perks of stardom – but not to worry because “you and the six (a reference to his Toronto roots) raised me right.”

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Lauren Alaina: Like My Mother Does

Contrary to popular belief, there are plenty of country songs about moms that aren’t tearjerker. “Like My Mother Doges” got Lauren Alaina a runner-up slot on American Idol and launched her recording career. The uplifting song was actually first recorded by season seven American Idol contestant Kristy Lee Cook for her 2008 album, Why Wait, making it an Idol favorite.

Bruce Springsteen: The Wish

Bruce Springsteen repurposed several greatest hits for Springsteen on Broadway, but its emotional centerpiece was this deep cut that got largely overlooked on the Tracks box set. After saluting the sacrifices his mother made and her ultimate gift of a cheap guitar, Springsteen makes the wish that he could just take her dancing to a great rock’n’roll band.

Boyz II Men: A Song for Mama

While some of the songs on this list call for mom to have specialized tastes (or a sense of humor), here’s one anyone can sing to their mother and know she’ll be touched. Nothing but love on this Boyz II Men cut with lines like, “Your love is like tears from the stars…lovin’ you is like food to my soul,” to show your filial devotion.

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Carrie Underwood: Mama’s Song

Carrie Underwood said a big goodbye to her mom, not once but twice: In 2006’s “Don’t Forget to Remember Me,” she’s leaving the house and going on her own after graduation. Four years later, this tune asks her mom to accept that she’s getting married, and not to worry, the guy’s great and will take good care of her.

The Jackson 5: Mama’s Pearl

Mama doesn’t fare too well in this Jackson 5 classic since she always told her daughter to stay away from guys and these guys are telling her just the opposite. ‘Mama’s Pearl’ still comes out sounding fairly wholesome, but this was the last J5 hit to have that lively kiddie sound; the mature ‘Never Can Say Goodbye’ would soon follow.

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Flo & Eddie: Mama, Open Up

This Flo & Eddie single is the ex-Turtles team at their dark-humored best, seeking some immediate shelter from the trials of the music biz: “Mama open up, I’m coming back in!” You decide whether they just want to come back home, or whether they’re taking the Oedipal thing to extremes.

BB King: Nobody Loves Me But My Mother

As originally recorded by BB King, Nobody Loves Me But My Mother” was originally an album-opening fragment with just one verse of lyric (he’d later grow it into a full song onstage) but it contains one of the most quotable lines in King’s catalog, if not the entire blues canon: “Nobody loves me but my mother…and she could be jiving too”.

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Ozzy Osbourne: Mama, I’m Coming Home

Ozzy’s biggest power ballad essentially follows Flo & Eddie’s concept without the laughs (and with some wonderful Beach Boys-type harmonies). Co-written by fellow sensitive soul Lemmy Kilmister, it’s about returning to a place where you know you’re loved. He apparently wrote it about his wife Sharon (at least she says so), but it struck a chord for mothers and sons everywhere.

James Brown: Mother Popcorn

Only James Brown could record a classic song about moms that doubles as a dance craze hit. During the song, the Godfather of Soul looks up from his dancing to note that there are lots of great mothers out there, but he prefers them tall and proud. A perfect Mother’s Day song for all the moms that love a bit of funk.

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David Peel & the Lower East Side: Happy Mother’s Day

Not all songs about moms are sentimental, including this 1968 single about a teenage runaway by NYC outfit David Peel & the Lower East Side off their debut album Have A Marijuana. And what does this model son do to celebrate his newfound freedom? “Living on the East Side, always getting stoned/ Always getting high, I’m glad I’m not at home!”

The Beatles: Julia

This “White Album” track was such an exquisite love song that many fans overlooked the fact that John Lennon was singing about his late mother. This celebrated the tender side of their relationship, while the later solo tune “Mother,” addressed the underlying tension.

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The Beatles: Let It Be

If you’re so inclined, the Paul McCartney line “When I find myself in times of trouble/Mother Mary comes to me/Speaking words of wisdom/Let it be” has plenty of religious connotations. For those ready to tweak the lyrics just a little bit, it becomes a simple tribute to the knowledge that only a mother can have.

Kate Bush: Mother Stands for Comfort

Though this is the sparest song on Hounds of Love, it’s also one of the most haunting, and nobody did strange beauty better than Kate Bush in 1985. Lyrically it’s about a murderer who turns to mother for solace – call it “Bohemian Rhapsody” without the opera.

Thin Lizzy: Philomena (1974)

Phil Lynott did his mom the ultimate compliment of putting her name in the song title, one of the most traditional Irish-sounding tracks of Thin Lizzy’s heyday. It’s a brilliant song, even if Lynott doesn’t come off as the most attentive son in the world: “Tell her that I love her, and I’ll try to write sometime.”

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Johnny Guitar Watson: A Real Mother For Ya

So maybe this song is really about rising gas prices and the like, and the title is just a radio-friendly way of saying something else. But if your mother is at all funky, she’ll be able to relate to this gritty classic.

Glen Campbell: The Hand That Rocks the Cradle

If you’re going to get sentimental about Mom, you might as well go all the way. Though it was recorded well into the 80s, this Glen Campbell tune (a duet with Steve Wariner) is one of the ultimate old-fashioned songs about moms, saying that “There ought to be a hall of fame for mamas/Creation’s most unique and precious pearls/And heaven help us always to remember/That the hand that rocks the cradle rules the world.”

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Dolly Parton: Coat of Many Colors

In this masterful bit of storytelling, the mother from a poor family shows her love by knitting her daughter a coat like Joseph’s coat in the Bible. But instead of going for a tearjerker finale, Parton reveals the daughter gets laughed at by the richer kids at school. The lesson? “Now I know we had no money / But I was rich as I could be / In my coat of many colors / My momma made for me.”

Tupac Shakur: Dear Mama

This landmark rap song was brutally honest, acknowledging the things that Tupac’s mother did wrong. But Tupac couches all of this in a simple fact: A single mother on welfare doesn’t have many options. By choosing truth over fiction, it’s all the more powerful.

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Various – Remember Me

While “Remember Me” from Coco is about any family member that you miss, you’ll find this tune on countless “Mother’s Day” playlists for good reason. The song’s sweet sentiment of remembering a departed loved one has cemented itself as a song that children can turn to if they’re missing their mother. – Jacklyn Krol

Danzig: Mother

In this corner, you have the well-meaning parents of the world. And in the other corner, Glenn Danzig, the corruptor of sons and daughters. Supposedly inspired by the PMRC hearings, this metal classic allowed Danzig to riff on eternal generation-gap themes.

Madonna – Promise To Try

This tender ballad from Madonna’s Like a Prayer marks a sharp contrast from the provocative early singles. But, in case anyone forgot, Madonna made a simple declaration in the liner notes: “This album is dedicated to my mother, who taught me how to pray.”

The Rolling Stones: Mother’s Little Helper

Along with The Who’s far kinkier “I’m a Boy,” this Rolling Stones’ song was one of the first songs to acknowledge that parents had rock’n’roll vices of their own. As Jagger’s generation would learn in time, truer words than “What a drag it is getting old,” were never sung.

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Fountains of Wayne: Stacy’s Mom

Nothing’s more all-American than a song about loving your mother unless, of course, it’s one about a crush on somebody else’s mom. A teenaged slice of life, and one of the many pop gems that Adam Schlesinger left us.

Rare Earth: Ma

When it comes to songs about moms, 70s soul delivers (sorry) the motherlode. This epic Norman Whitfield production devotes a whole side to singing the praises of a tough contemporary mom who fights all of society’s obstacles to do right by her kids.

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Elvis Presley: Mama Liked the Roses

One of the most heartfelt performances in Elvis Presley’s catalog, “Mama Liked The Roses” was recorded in 1970 when his voice was arguably at an all-time peak. Elvis’s love for his mother Gladys was legendary and though this tribute song was recorded 12 years after her death, you can still hear him fighting back tears during the spoken part. Though only a B-side at the time, it’s since become one of the iconic Elvis tracks.

Merle Haggard: Mama Tried

As Merle Haggard pointed out in this signature song (also done memorably by the Grateful Dead three years later), you can have a saintly mother and still wind up in the slammer. Though he recorded “Mama Tried” quite a few years later, the song was likely conceived when Haggard himself did time himself. Though, unlike the song’s hero who got life without parole, he only served short sentences for robbery.

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The Shirelles: Mama Said

“Mama Said” is one of the first and greatest songs about moms in rock’n’roll, in which the singer responds to first love by realizing Mama told her there’d be days like this. It was a classic bit of wisdom that was later borrowed by everyone from John Lennon (“Nobody Told Me”) to Van Morrison (“Days Like This”). It also spawned a long string of songs about motherly advice, including the next three on this list.

Three Dog Night: Mama Told Me Not to Come

Mama knew best in this case, warning her rather messed-up son that he’d freak out if he went to that wild party. It was written, of course, by Randy Newman, but Three Dog Night had the hit, and lead singer Cory Wells gave it that perfect paranoid reading. Could this be the first hit song about agoraphobia?

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The Supremes: You Can’t Hurry Love

In the Shirelles song, Mama knew all about the glories of love. But she also knew that it didn’t always work out, which led to one of the wisest (and ultimately reassuring) songs in the Motown catalog. It’s arguably the best performance of Diana Ross’ life, a timeless sentiment, and one of the best basslines in music history.

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Kathryn Beaumont – Your Mother and Mine

On “Your Mother and Mine” from Peter Pan, Wendy Darling (Kathryn Beaumont) explains to Peter Pan and The Lost Boys what the love of a mother means. The tender lullaby perfectly sums up a mother’s angelic qualities and describes her as having an unbreakable bond with her children. – Jacklyn Krol

LL Cool J: Mama Said Knock You Out

Mom doesn’t really turn up much in the lyrics to this hip-hop classic, we just know that LL Cool J is knocking out every other DJ because his mother told him to. And since he did indeed knock out the competition with this track, he can probably thank Mama for bailing him out. A perfect Mother’s Day song for moms who love old-school hip-hop.

The Intruders: I’ll Always Love My Mama

Nothing serenades your mom better than vintage Philly soul, and no Gamble & Huff song was ever sweeter than this pledge of love: “She’s my favorite girl!” It opens their hearts without getting sappy and, like all Philly soul records, it’s also great to dance to.

ABBA: Mamma Mia

One of the greatest hits from the Swedish pop supergroup ABBA, this song’s lyrics reveal that it doesn’t have much to do with Mother’s Day exactly, but if you focus on the title when you’re singing it, we’re sure your Mamma won’t mind.

Alicia Keys: Superwoman

What is a mom, if not a superwoman? With lyrics like, “Even when I’m a mess/I still put on a vest/With an S on my chest/Oh yes,” Alicia Keys’ empowering anthem is perfect for you to play for that special woman in your life on this very special day.

Think we’ve missed any of the best Mother’s Day songs? Let us know in the comments section below. 

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Stanley Tucci Defends 21-Year Age Gap With Wife Felicity Blunt

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MLB Roundtable: Mets On Track? Are The Cardinals Legit? Worry For The Dodgers?

All three National League divisions are chock-full of intrigue. The NL East-leading Braves are one of the surprise stories in MLB as two postseason contenders – the Mets and Phillies – stumbled out the gate. In the NL Central, all five teams are above .500, and it feels like it could be a dogfight through October. In the NL West, it’s the Dodgers who rule the roost but don’t sleep on a couple of teams who can keep pace. Let’s take a look at some of the teams and notable storylines in the National League: 1. The Mets have somewhat steadied the ship after a 12-game losing streak earlier this season. Is there still more reason for pessimism than optimism? Thosar: As of Friday, the Mets are tied with the San Francisco Giants for the worst record (14-23) in baseball. So, yes, there are still plenty of reasons to be concerned about how they will resemble a competitive ball club against good teams. They just won two series in a row on the road, but what happens when they’re not playing bottom feeders like the Angels and Rockies? Given how dominant the Yankees have looked this year, next weekend’s Subway Series at Citi Field has a high probability of being a one-sided affair. Most of the Mets’ problems start with their disappointing offense, and the longer this trend continues, the harder it will be for president of baseball operations David Stearns to use underperformance as the explanation. We’re now six weeks into the season and the Mets have the worst slugging percentage (.351) in the majors, an on-base percentage (.293) that’s ranked 29th, and a batting average (.229) that’s ranked 28th. They’ve scored the second-fewest runs (134) in MLB. Losing Francisco Lindor (left calf strain) to the injured list was a huge blow, and it’s ominous that his timeline to return is unclear. It’s hard to see how the offense will turn it around without him. It would help if Bo Bichette — who owns a .585 OPS — looked more like himself at the plate, and if Mark Vientos could find some consistency. 2. Arizona has stars in 2B Ketel Marte and OF Corbin Carroll, but has given up the NL’s second-most runs. Will the D-backs keep up with the Dodgers and Padres? Kavner: They’re trending in the wrong direction, and I don’t think their pitching is good enough to keep up with the Dodgers, but there is still reason to believe their offense can be good enough to contend with the Padres and push for a wild-card spot. Now, I can’t imagine that 34-year-old Ildemaro Vargas is going to look like an MVP contender all year — we’re already seeing him start to slow down — but there’s reason to believe that the offense overall should be better going forward. I find it hard to believe that Ketel Marte (.615 OPS) will be a considerably below league-average hitter all year, and we haven’t seen the best of Geraldo Perdomo (.743) or Gabriel Moreno (.694) yet. Remember, too, that Corbin Burnes is expected back at some point, and A.J. Puk and Justin Martinez could be back helping the bullpen in the second half. Those are potentially huge X-factors down the stretch. 3. The Cardinals have two of the best young players in J.J. Wetherholt and Jordan Walker. Does St. Louis have enough to maintain this run? Thosar: It’s been terrific to watch this Cardinals team play better than expected, flashing the type of tight team spirit and chemistry that a certain high-payroll club with household names can only dream about. St. Louis is getting it done without all that, thanks largely to Walker’s breakout year, Alec Burleson’s team-leading 29 RBIs (tied with Aaron Judge for the seventh-most in MLB), and, of course, Wetherholt’s excellent start to his rookie season. But the impactful hitter who everyone seems to be overlooking is Ivan Herrera. The Cardinals’ 25-year-old catcher/designated hitter is one of the best young hitters in the game. Since 2024, Herrera owns an .824 OPS (135 OPS+) in 215 games. St. Louis’ surge of power has been another unexpected surprise. The Cards’ 44 home runs are ranked ninth in MLB, which is a huge turnaround after they finished 29th in homers last season. Out of all the encouraging stats from one of the youngest teams in baseball, there are two that most capture their grit. The Cardinals are 5-0 in extra-innings, and 7-2 in one-run games. As of right now, they’re positioned to make the playoffs via the NL Wild Card. It’s too early to count them out of a postseason push, but there are reasons to believe it won’t happen. All of their young players are bound to run into slumps at the plate, and that’s likely going to lead to some inconsistency. Plus, their weak starting pitching (4.67 ERA, 25th in MLB) is struggling to register strikeouts (6.97 K/9, 29th in MLB). There’s not a ton of margin for error here, and how they handle adversity in the dog days of summer will be telling. Still, for a team that went into a full rebuild this offseason, the way the Cardinals have started this season is nothing short of inspiring. 4. The Padres have once again kept pace with the Dodgers atop the NL West. Will this season be any different? Kavner: With Mason Miller, anything feels possible, but I just can’t see the Dodgers losing this division. A.J. Preller always finds a way to do something unexpected at the deadline, but as currently constructed, it’s hard to see the depth either in the lineup or in the rotation being enough to win the NL West. The Padres rank 24th in OPS on the year, and their starters over the last 14 days have an ERA over 6.00. With Nick Pivetta sidelined and Joe Musgrove still out, it’s difficult to see that changing in a meaningful way. Jason Adam and Miller at the end of games provide comfort, and I expect better days ahead for the stars in the lineup — the Padres have stunningly jumped out to this start despite Jackson Merrill, Manny Machado and Fernando Tatis Jr. (who has yet to homer) all being below league-average hitters to this point — but I’m not confident there will be enough leads to protect for them to dethrone the back-to-back champs.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Possible Human Remains Found in Kristin Smart Case After 30 Years

Kristin SmartPolice may be closing in on finally finding Kristin Smart after 30 years.
The California college student—who went missing in 1996 when she was 19 years old—was declared legally dead in 2002,…
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Maaden LIV Golf Virginia: Lucas Herbert Takes Commanding Lead After Round 2

Lucas Herbert has broken away from the field after 36 holes at Maaden LIV Golf Virginia, leaving him in position to chase his first league victory – and a potential spot in next month’s U.S. Open. Herbert backed up his opening 8-under 64 with an even better round on Friday, a bogey-free 9-under 63 to move to 17 under, giving the youngest Ripper GC member a commanding six-shot lead over Fireballs GC Captain Sergio Garcia. It’s the largest 36-hole lead since LIV Golf switched to a 72-hole format this season and ties for the second-largest lead after any second round in league history. Garcia and Cleeks GC veteran Richard Bland are the only players within 10 shots of the lead, with Garcia at 11 under after shooting a 67 while the 53-year-old Bland shot a bogey-free 66 to move to 7 under. Garcia certainly isn’t ready to concede the trophy to Herbert, but he knows the tournament is now in the hands of the 30-year-old Australian. “If he keeps playing like that, it’s going to be very difficult [to catch him],” Garcia said. Crushers GC teammates Charles Howell III and Paul Casey are tied for fourth along with Southern Guards GC’s Dean Burmester at 6 under. LIV Golf’s top three players in points – Jon Rahm, Bryson DeChambeau and Thomas Detry – are in a five-way tie for 7th. Asked for his strategy in reeling in Herbert, Casey replied: “Nothing you can do. This is going to sound wrong. Am I worried about Lucas? Of course I am, he’s leading by 10. Am I worried about Lucas? No, because he’s so far ahead, he’s leading by 10, so what can I do?” Detry entered this week in position to earn the U.S. Open exemption that goes to the top-3 player in the standings who is not otherwise exempt. But Herbert is now projected to claim that exemption with a win unless Detry can finish solo 4th or better. Herbert’s performance through 36 holes is even more impressive considering he battled the flu earlier this week, limiting his practice time. Until Thursday’s first round, he had not seen the front nine at Trump National Washington D.C. Fully familiar with the course, Herbert found the zone on Friday with a flawless display of iron play, bunker saves and mid-range putting. He produced a string of four consecutive birdies to end his front nine and finished with birdies on his final two holes. Herbert picked up 8.596 strokes on the field – his second-best total in LIV Golf history next to the 10.426 strokes he gained in shooting 61 last year in Mexico City. Garcia managed to stay close to Herbert with four birdies in his final five holes, while Bland also finished strong with birdies in three of his final six holes. Led by Herbert, Ripper GC has command of the team leaderboard at a cumulative 21 under, six shots better than the Cleeks and Crushers. The Rippers entered this week as the leader in points and are seeking their third tournament win of the season. Leaderboards Individual Top 10 1. Lucas Hebert (17-under)2. Sergio Garcia (11-under)3. Richard Bland (7-under)T4. Dean Burmester (6-under)T4. Paul Casey (6-under)T4. Charles Howell III (6-under)T7. Marc Leishman (5-under)T7. Bryson DeChambeau (5-under)T7. Thomas Detry (5-under)T7. Graeme McDowell (5-under)T7. Jon Rahm (5-under) Team Top 3 1. Ripper GD (21-under)T2. Crushers GC (15-under)T2. Cleeks Golf Club GC (15-under) This piece is courtesy of Mike McAllister in partnership with LIV Golf.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Olivia Culpo Pregnant With Baby No. 2 With Husband Christian McCaffrey

Christian McCaffrey and Olivia CulpoOlivia Culpo and Christian McCaffrey are growing their team again!
Nearly 10 months after giving birth to her first baby Colette, the former Miss Universe announced she and the San Francisco 49ers…
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Why This Small Georgia City Calls Itself ‘The Watermelon Capital Of The World’

This tiny Southern city in Crisp County, Georgia feels that its watermelon are a cut above the rest in terms of quality and taste. Learn why!

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