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A disco influenced pop song in its original mix, the popular remixed version of the song is even more disco-oriented. It was one of the first songs that Adams and Vallance wrote together and was based on a rag-time piano riff that Vallance had written. The writing took place during February 1978 and the song was recorded at Pinewood Studios by ...
The song is an electro-disco and nu-disco song with several disco tropes. It incorporates elements of dance-pop, pop-funk, power pop and space rock, as well as 1970s, 1980s and 1990s pop and R&B styles. The lyrics describe the idea of "levitating" when falling in love, with several outer space references.
Songs may be remixed for a large variety of reasons: to adapt or revise a song for radio or nightclub play; to create a stereo or surround sound version of a song where none was previously available; to improve the fidelity of an older song for which the original master has been lost or degraded; to alter a song to suit a specific music genre ...
It is a reggaeton song about exalting the attributes of women with breast and butt implants, an allegory to remix versions being better than the originals. Commercially, "Remix" reached number 147 on the Billboard Global 200 , as well as number one in Monitor Latino 's Puerto Rico and Mexico and the US Latin Airplay chart, as well as number ...
Like its predecessor, Jacques Lu Cont's remix of "That Kind of Woman" also has a club feel, and incorporates Kylie Minogue-style disco and Balearic genres. [ 6 ] [ 11 ] [ 15 ] The DJ mix edition of Club Future Nostalgia closes with a remix of "Break My Heart" by Moodymann, who looped Lipa's vocal phrases and adjusted his sound to fit hers.
The song was released in Italy as a limited edition 12" single, featuring the "Italian" remix (Disco album version) and an exclusive remix by Ian Levine [6] [9] who would go on to remix "It's a Sin". It came to wider attention as the B-side to "Suburbia" before appearing as an extended mix (a.k.a. the "Italian" remix) on the 1986 remix album Disco.
Alim Kheraj, writing for Yahoo Life, described Tronicbox's remix of "Into You" as a "dreamy and slinky '80s midtempo bop". [13]An article for Triple J thought "Somebody That I Used To Know" remix by the same artist was a "pitch-perfect '80s makeover, complete with wailing guitars". [14]
[1] [2] The band did most of their own production work, recording and mixing, [2] and two of its members had studied electronic music in college. [3] The Remixes EP is a collection of their remix work from 2009–2010. The first track was made for a Scion A/V remix collection of Todd Edwards' "I Might Be".