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"Dancing Queen" is a single released by A-Teens, an ABBA tribute band from Sweden. It is the fourth and final single from their first album, The ABBA Generation (1999). Released in March 2000, the song peaked at number 95 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and entered the top 100 in Germany and the Netherlands.
"Dancing Queen" is a Korean song by South Korean girl group Girls' Generation. It was released on December 21, 2012, as the lead single from their fourth Korean studio album, I Got a Boy (2013). Recorded in 2008, the song was initially scheduled to be released as the title track for the group's second studio album.
American singer and actress Cher covered the song on her album Dancing Queen, released on 28 September 2018. Cher's version is the lead single on the album. [52] [53] The accompanying audio video for "Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight)" was premiered through Cher's official YouTube channel on 9 August 2018.
Dancing Queen is the twenty-sixth studio album by American singer Cher, released by Warner Bros. Records on September 28, 2018. It was Cher's first album in five years, following Closer to the Truth (2013). The album contains cover versions of songs recorded by Swedish pop group ABBA, with the title referencing their 1976 song "Dancing Queen".
"Breakthru" is a song by the British rock band Queen. Written by Freddie Mercury and Roger Taylor [citation needed] but credited to Queen, it was released in June 1989 from the album The Miracle. The single reached number seven in the UK, and peaked at number 6 in the Netherlands and Ireland, but failed to chart in the US.
Bert Kaempfert - for his 1960 album Dancing in Wonderland [19] Tony Bennett recorded it twice, first in 1961 for the album My Heart Sings, [20] and then in 1993 for the Steppin' Out album [21] Mel Tormé - for his 1961 album My Kind of Music [22] Connie Stevens on her 1962 album From Me To You [23] Bill Evans - for the 1964 album Trio 64 [24]
The song also has the sequence of G ♭-B ♭ m 7-G ♭ /C ♭-D ♭-E ♭ m-D ♭ as its chord progression. [5] Houston's vocals in the song span from the note of D ♭ 4 to the high note of G 5. [5] Lyrically, the song speaks about the lead woman trying to discern whether a man she likes will ever like her back. [7]
Dayton Daily News critic Gary Nuhn called it "a song with Beatles-like lyrics of a man pulling himself up. [10] Courier-News critic Bill Bleyer says that it makes a similar point as the more popular song, "We Are the Champions," – that "while the established order continues to hold down the young, they can still make it if they try" – it does so better and "without overpowering the listener."