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His second album, Wake Up Calls was released on 18 September 2020. [8] His third album, Eye to the Ear, was released on 12 April 2024. [9] Sheldrake founded and runs the record label Tardigrade Records, with Moth Records as an imprint. [10] In 2015, he included "Tardigrade Song" on his EP Pelicans We, imagining himself as a tardigrade. [11] [12]
"4 Minutes" is a song by American singer Madonna from her eleventh studio album Hard Candy (2008), featuring vocals by fellow American singer Justin Timberlake and American producer Timbaland. It was released as the lead single from the album on March 17, 2008, by Warner Bros. Records .
Cosmo Radio was a channel on Sirius XM Radio.The station launched on March 14, 2006 as a collaboration between SIRIUS Satellite Radio and Cosmopolitan magazine. The programs featured everything that Cosmopolitan offered like advice on sex, love, and relationships, beauty and fashion tips, celebrity news and music.
"Wake Up" was written by band members Dan Reynolds, Wayne Sermon, and Ben McKee and Mattman & Robin who also produced the track. A snippet of the song, along with snippets of "Fire in These Hills" and "Nice to Meet You", were shared to the winning Croyants team on the band's four doors website.
"R.E.M" is a R&B song containing a doo-wop beat. [2] It runs for a duration of four minutes and six seconds. [3] The song "Dream" was originally recorded as a demo by T-Pain on March 12, 2011, and ran for a duration of four minutes and 27 seconds. [4] It was then passed onto Beyoncé and recorded under the title "Wake Up" in 2013.
Ira A. Robbins of Trouser Press praised Good for Your Soul, particularly producer Robert Margouleff for giving the band a "streamlined and powerfully driven attack", calling "Wake Up (It's 1984)" and "Who Do You Want to Be" "among the most invigorating and engaging things the band has ever done."
The trio dropped an upbeat new single titled “Call Me When You Break Up,” and though it might sound like a message directed to an ex, Gomez recently clarified the real subject of the song.
The song was generally well-received upon release, with many journalists praising the band for maintaining their high-energy rock sound with the song, while being over twenty years into their career. [23] [12] People praised the song for being "a return to full-speed-ahead rock. Like the best of Foo Fighters, it's hard and occasionally hilarious."