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No proper music video was shot for "Set Fire to the Rain" (as well as other singles from 21, "Rumour Has It" and "Turning Tables") as Adele had recently undergone vocal surgery. [30] Instead, a live performance video filmed at The Royal Albert Hall was uploaded on YouTube to her Vevo account and has received more than 789 million views as of ...
With a budget of $7 million, "Scream" by Michael Jackson (left) and Janet Jackson (right) is the most expensive music video of all time—both nominally and adjusted for inflation. This article lists the most expensive music videos ever made, with costs of $500,000 or more, from those whose budgets have been disclosed.
After returning to number one the week of 16 May 2012, the DVD set the record for the most weeks spent at number one for a music DVD by a female artist with 23 weeks at number one. [6] In May 2013, the DVD logged its 28th week on top of the chart, extending its record for the longest-running #1 music video by a female artist. [23]
The "Set Fire to the Rain" performance incorporates pyrotechnics and a stage-wide waterfall; [50] [52] raindrops fall on the stage and a fire starts burning under a white piano, spreading throughout the stage before covering the piano. [59] Towards the end of the performance, the piano sinks into a small pool of water. [60]
[16] According to the sheet music published by Universal Music Publishing Group at the website Musicnotes.com, "Rumour Has It" is written in the key of D minor. [17] It is set in a time signature of common time with an up-tempo beat of 126 beats per minute. [17] Adele's vocal ranges from the note of D 3 to the note of E6. [17]
“November Rain” cost a reported $1.5 million, making it the most expensive music video of its time — a milestone that was quickly surpassed but that drew much negative media attention ...
Adele was the first recipient of this award, and won it four times, winning consecutively for "Someone Like You" and a live rendition of "Set Fire to the Rain", for "Hello", and for “Easy on Me” in 2023. 2014 winner Lorde. Two-time winner Ed Sheeran. 2020 winner Lizzo.
The single, the first from Toto IV, set the stage for the album's enormous multi-platinum success. "Rosanna" went to No. 2 on Billboard 's Hot 100 and won four Grammys, including Record of the Year.