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"Blue (Da Ba Dee)" is a song by Italian music group Eiffel 65. It was first released in October 1998 in Italy by Skooby Records and became internationally successful the following year. [ 3 ] It is the lead single of the group's 1999 debut album, Europop .
I'm Blue may refer to: "Blue (Da Ba Dee)", a song by Eiffel 65 "I'm Blue (The Gong-Gong Song), an Ike Turner song recorded in 1961; I'm Blue, Skies, a 2013 album by Cheyenne Jackson "I'm Blue, I'm Lonesome", a bluegrass song by Bill Monroe
Zorotl was supposed to be a malicious character but since he was designed with a funny round body, the authors of the "Blue (Da Ba Dee)" video decided to portray it as tender, changing the script and giving it a happy ending. [24] In 2000, Bliss Corporation made a video for the unreleased Eiffel 65 song "I Wanna Be".
The song is built around an interpolation of "Blue (Da Ba Dee)" by Italian electronic music group Eiffel 65, created by faint synth pads, while the production also contains minimal hi-hats, snares, and kicks in the drum pattern and occasional high-pitched synth keys. [2]
"I'm Good (Blue)" is a song by French DJ and producer David Guetta and American singer and songwriter Bebe Rexha. Produced by the former alongside Timofey Reznikov, it was written by the artists alongside Kamille and Plested, with additional writing credits going to Jeffrey Jey, Massimo Gabutti, and Maurizio Lobina, as the song is a reworking of Italian group Eiffel 65's single "Blue (Da Ba ...
As a San Antonio, Texas-based swimming coach, 65-year-old Ingraham continues to crush her personal goals. She says that at 63, she swam in a four-day staged open water swim, without a wetsuit, in ...
In his review for Courier News, Tab Benoit called Eiffel 65 a "one-trick pony" for using the same vocal effect for all tracks. [12] The album peaked at number four on the Billboard 200 in the United States, and the song "Blue (Da Ba Dee)" peaked at number six on the Billboard Hot 100, impressive for an EDM song at the time
Entertainment Weekly said in a review of Europop that it was hard to call "Move Your Body" a "timeless masterpiece," but it was impossible to hate it. [1] Billboard called it a "kitschy electronic number" and commented on "the song's catchy melody, addictive lyrical redundancy, and the familiar computerized voice of the trio's Jeffrey Jey".