Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[1] [2] "Swag Se Swagat" became the first Indian music video to cross 500 million views on YouTube. [3] [4] [5] "Humpty the train on a fruits ride" by "Kiddiestv Hindi - Nursery Rhymes & Kids Songs" became the first Hindi video on YouTube to cross 1 billion views on 26 December 2019 and is the most viewed Hindi video on YouTube. "Chotu ke ...
"Live Forever" has garnered additional acclaim years after its release. In 2006, "Live Forever" was named the greatest song of all time in a poll released by Q; the song had ranked ninth in a similar Q poll three years prior. [23] In 2007, "Live Forever" placed number one in the NME and XFM poll of the 50 "Greatest Indie Anthems Ever". [24]
"Forever Came Today" is a 1968 song written and produced by the Motown collective of Holland–Dozier–Holland, and was first made into a hit as a single for Diana Ross & the Supremes in early 1968. A disco version of the song was released as a single seven years later by Motown group the Jackson 5 .
The song has been described as a romantic track that finds Payne singing about how "the person he loves makes him want to 'live forever'." [2] Musically, the track is an EDM-pop and dance song. [3] [4] It was written in the key of E minor and has a tempo of 85 BPM. [5]
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
"Forever" began receiving airplay on pop and rhythmic radio stations across the US while urban radio stations still playing his previous single, "Take You Down". The song has finally been added to urban radio stations in the week of July 7, 2008, and made a debut at number ninety-five on the Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, peaking at number ...
"Live Forever" (The Band Perry song), 2015 "Live Forever" (Liam Payne song), 2019 "Live Forever" (Magnus Carlsson song), 2007 "Live Forever" (Oasis song), 1994 "Live Forever", a 2005 song by Moby from the album Hotel: Ambient
"Supersonic" is a song by English rock band Oasis, released as their debut single on 11 April 1994, and later appeared on their debut studio album, Definitely Maybe (1994). It was produced by the band and Mark Coyle, their live sound engineer. The single was accompanied by two music videos, one directed by Mark Szaszy and the other by Nick Egan.