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"Bye-Bye" is a song by Japanese singer-songwriter Ayumi Hamasaki. It was released on April 8, 2024, through Avex Trax, and used as the April-May 2024 theme for Minna no Uta. The song peaked at number four on the Oricon Daily Digital Singles Chart upon release, and ranked at number twenty-five on the Oricon Weekly Digital Singles Chart.
Bye Bye Bye" is widely considered to be the group's signature song. [2] "Bye Bye Bye" was a commercial success, peaking at number four on the US Billboard Hot 100 and within the top 10 in almost every country in which it charted. The song received a Grammy nomination in 2001 for Record of the Year, but lost to U2's "Beautiful Day".
"Bye Bye" is a song by Italian singer-songwriter Annalisa. It was written by Annalisa, Daniele Lazzarin and Patrizio Simonini, and produced by Michele Canova. [1]It was released by Warner Music Italy on 20 April 2018 as the third single from her sixth studio album with the same name. [2]
Bye Bye Birdie is a stage musical with music by Charles Strouse and lyrics by Lee Adams, based upon a book by Michael Stewart. Originally titled Let's Go Steady , Bye Bye Birdie is set in 1958. The play's book was influenced by Elvis Presley being drafted into the Army in 1957.
The official music video for "Bye Bye", directed by Stripmall, was released on Marshmello's YouTube channel on October 14, 2022. [6] It starts with a teenaged boy dropping a quarter in a machine in an abandoned arcade and making it come to life along with an animated Juice Wrld, as he then starts transporting through time and space.
Jennifer Ellison covered the title track "Bye Bye Boy" in English and released it as a single in 2004. It is her second, and so far, final single. It reached number 13 on the UK charts. [2] The music video for "Bye Bye Boy" features Ellison and an all-girl rock band. In the video Ellison dances en pointe, as she was a trained ballet dancer who ...
"Bye" is two minutes and 45 seconds long. [1] The song is a lavish and retro-inspired dance-pop, [2] disco, [3] and disco funk [4] song with elements of Philadelphia soul echoing the sound of 1970s pop music. [5] "Bye" features strings, adding in the disco influences throughout the song.
The song was recorded on January 11, 1963, by Williamson on vocal and harmonica, backed by Lafayette Leake or Billy Emerson on organ, Matt Murphy on guitar, Milton Rector on bass, and Al Duncan on drums. [3] "Bye Bye Bird" is included on several Sonny Boy Williamson compilation albums, such as More Real Folk Blues (1967) and His Best (1997). [4]