Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pop'n'Gum is the second studio album by French power pop group Superbus. It reached the 26th place on French album charts. It was released in June 2004. Its first single, Radio Song, is a playable bonus song on Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock.
Superbus is a five-piece French pop rock band formed in 1999 [1] with Jenn Ayache on lead vocals. The band's name is from the Latin word superbus, meaning proud, which Ayache stumbled upon while browsing through a Latin dictionary.
Critics of Music Y rated the song 3.5 out of 5 stars. Kim Seong-hwan praised Bibi's vocal sense that is not "weighed down by the trendy sound". [4] Critics of Tonplein picked the song as one of the best R&B tracks of 2020. Cho Ji-hwan noted that the unique charm of the song comes from its bridge. [5]
"Bam Yang Gang" is a "breezy song with a touch of waltz" written by singer-songwriter Chang Ki-ha. It depicts memories of past love. Through the lyrics, Bibi says that what she expected from her ex-boyfriend was not a grand feast but rather a traditional Korean treat "bamyanggaeng," or sweet chestnut red bean jelly, a metaphor for "simple yet authentic love".
Wow is the third studio album by the French power pop band Superbus. It was released on 16 October 2006 on Mercury Records. It was released on 16 October 2006 on Mercury Records. The album reached the sixth place on French album charts.
Songs about radio or specific radio programs, excluding program theme songs whose only radio topic is the show itself. Pages in category "Songs about radio" The following 86 pages are in this category, out of 86 total.
Aéromusical is the first studio album by the French power pop group Superbus, released in 2002. It reached 96th place on the French album charts. [ 1 ] It consists of 11 original songs and one cover (" Into the Groove ", originally by Madonna ).
Heino Gaze wrote the German lyrics, although the German song title was rendered as "Gilli-Gilli, Oxenpfeffer, Katzenellenbogen". Bibi Johns und Die Starlets, with Franz Thon und das Tanzorchester des NWDR, Hamburg, [9] recorded it in Hamburg on September 5, 1954. The song was released by Electrola (part of HMV). [9]