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An extremely commercial and very positive song, it features a four-piece brass section, a guitar and 20 female drummers. The latter's inclusion gives a sometimes thunderous rumble to appropriate sections of the song, but the rest is very lightweight and breezy, with a vaguely Latin flavour floating in with the brass section. Another Top 10 hit."
Bangır Bangır (Loudly Loudly) is the ninth studio album by Turkish singer Gülşen.It was released on 29 April 2015 by Doğan Music Company. Initial information about the album was first discussed in February 2014, and its release date was postponed as Gülşen wrote and composed songs for her colleagues.
"Vivrant Thing" became the fourth rap song to reach number one on the Billboard Hot R&B Airplay chart since its 1992 inception. The single also reached number seven on the main Hot R&B Singles & Tracks chart, with its performance being driven overwhelmingly by airplay due to its lack of domestic availability in any configuration besides 12-inch ...
Kelly Clarkson continues to put her appreciation for Chappell Roan’s music on display—and when she performed part of one song on her popular NBC daytime talk show this week, she kept every ...
The EP's lead single "Apollo" was released on 11 March 2022. The song was produced by P.Priime. [3] The Blaisebeatz-produced second single "Kolomental" was released on 28 April 2022. [4] The third and final single, "Soweto," was released on 22 October 2022 alongside a Jyde Ajala-directed video.
With a string of heartfelt ballads and storytelling tracks under her belt, Shannon K is stepping boldly into 2025 with the release of her dynamic new single, “OTT.” A departure from her ...
[15] In a similar vein, Ben Foster of The 1-to-10 Country Music Review lamented the "bloated power pop arrangement", and felt that "Come Home" failed to evoke the "vibrancy and sonic stickiness of Hill's best pop-country efforts". Though describing the song as a letdown, Foster did highlight Hill's redeeming vocals and "strong interpretive ...
Similar to “Do You Hear What I Hear?,” this carol was inspired by wartime anxieties. Unitarian minister Edmund Sears at a Wayland, Mass. church wrote it in 1849.