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"Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker)" Single by the Rolling Stones; from the album Goats Head Soup; B-side "Dancing with Mr. D." Released: December 1973: Recorded: November–December 1972, May–June 1973: Genre: Rock; funk rock; hard rock; Length: 3: 27: Label: Rolling Stones: Songwriter(s) Jagger–Richards: Producer(s) Jimmy Miller: The ...
"I Can Make You Dance" is featured on the fictional radio station Bounce FM in the video game Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas. "Heartbreaker" is featured on the radio station Space 103.2 in Grand Theft Auto V , and was also featured in the 1995 film Friday .
The music video for "Heartbreaker" was filmed at the Los Angeles Theatre in Downtown Los Angeles on July 30–August 1, 1999. Directed by Brett Ratner , the music video began airing on MTV on August 16, 1999, following its premiere on the network's Making the Video series. [ 13 ]
Tom Maginnis of Allmusic said of the song that it "can only be viewed as mediocre by the Stones' impossibly high standards by this point." [1] Bud Scoppa of Rolling Stone was more critical, calling the song "hopelessly silly" as well as "the weakest opener ever so positioned on one of their albums, and they’ve never performed with less conviction."
Heartbreaker (Dionne Warwick album), or the title song (see below), 1982 . The Heartbreaker Demos, an album containing the demos made by Barry Gibb for Warwick's album, 2006
Heartbreaker is the twentieth solo studio album by American singer-songwriter Dolly Parton. It was released on July 17, 1978, by RCA Victor . The album was produced by Gary Klein and Parton with Charles Koppelman serving as executive producer, and was an even more direct aim at the pop charts, with several of its songs verging on disco.
The official music video for "Heartbreaker" premiered on YouTube on March 11, 2022, and was directed by Andrew Freedom Parry. [7] Moskaluke wears three different outfits throughout the video, which she intended to represent different types of love: "fun, carefree, passionate, and sometimes dreamy". [8] [9]
In 2009 Scherzinger was asked to re-write and record a pop music version of "Jai Ho", a song from the film Slumdog Millionaire. [3] The new English language version of the song was called "Jai Ho! (You Are My Destiny)", and Scherzinger was credited as a featured artist causing internal strife within and the eventual split of the group. [3]