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Calvin James Howard (October 4, 1978 – April 14, 2012), [1] better known as Viro the Virus, was an underground hip hop artist based in New Jersey and Philadelphia.Despite only some commercial success, Viro became well known on the underground hip hop circuit, with his most notable appearance being on the track "Starlight" [2] from the Snowgoons album Black Snow.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Numero_Uno_(Starlight_song)&oldid=769580983"
Snowgoons is a German underground hip hop production team composed of DJ Illegal (Manuu Rückert) and Det Gunner (D. Keller). In 2011, producers Sicknature (Jeppe Andersen) from Denmark and J.S. Kuster (Johann Sebastian Kuster) from Germany joined the group.
Lewis Corner of Digital Spy gave the song a positive review stating: "Luckily for Cardle, it's infinitely better than his Take That reject last effort. "It wouldn't matter if we died tonight/ We are beautiful," he proclaims over a rousing combo of weighty beats and soaring guitar riffs breezier than the top of the Blackpool tower, before unleashing his impressive vocal talents on the chorus.
A self-produced track, the song samples a rendition of Bart Howard's 1954 standard "Fly Me to the Moon", by Indonesian duo ‘The Macarons Project’ in 2018. [3] [4] Lyrics include references to the song itself, American rapper Meek Mill, Jamaica and his home South London. [5] Having found his significant other, he describes his wish to settle ...
In composing music for Minecraft, she felt "immense pressure" to deliver due to the "very highly acclaimed score" already in the game. [7] After submitting a demo, her goal with the "Nether Update" soundtrack was to see how far she "could push the sound of the piano until it resembled other things entirely."
"Starlight" was described as "pretty djenty" by Greg Kennelty of Metal Injection. [8] Scott Munro of Metal Hammer commented that the song "starts off slowly but soon kicks into a frantic pace, complete with catchy chorus, thundering drums and slabs of crunching guitars", [9] while Billboard called it a "ferocious and heavy melody that explores their signature hybrid of metal riffs and ...
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