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"Fear" (stylized as "FEAR.") is a song by American rapper Kendrick Lamar, from his fourth studio album DAMN., released on April 14, 2017. The twelfth track on the album (third on the Collector's Edition of Damn [2]), the song was written by Kendrick and produced by The Alchemist, with additional production by Bēkon.
The song incorporates a lyric scheme where each verse forms the acrostic "F.E.A.R." (for example, "For each a road" and "Fallen empires are ruling").In an interview with Clash magazine, Brown said that a main influence for "F.E.A.R." was The Autobiography of Malcolm X, which preached the study of etymology, so that one could have "control over people through the use of language."
The remake was titled "The Fear (The People vs. Lily Allen)" and consists of number of fans singing along to the song, fading in and out overtop of the original track. A music video was released alongside it, featuring hundreds of videos of fans singing and dancing to the song, as well as videos of Allen herself, collected together to form an ...
The song was on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for 20 weeks, reaching number 12 for the weeks of November 6 and November 13, 1976. [17] It was the band's highest-charting U.S. song and helped Agents of Fortune reach number 29 on the Billboard 200. [18] "(Don't Fear) The Reaper" charted even higher in Canada, peaking at number 7. [19]
"Shout" is a song by English pop rock band Tears for Fears, released as the second single from their second studio album, Songs from the Big Chair (1985), on 23 November 1984. [1] Roland Orzabal is the lead singer on the track, and he described it as "a simple song about protest". [5]
"Cars" is based on two musical sections: a verse/instrumental break and a bridge.The recording features a conventional rock rhythm section of bass guitar and drums, but the rest of the instruments used are analogue synthesisers, principally the Minimoog (augmenting the song's recognisable bass riff) and the Polymoog keyboard, providing austere synthetic string lines over the bass riff.
The song became the Banshees' biggest hit on the U.S. Billboard magazine's Hot Dance/Disco chart, climbing to number 6, as it was heavily played by many DJs. [2] " Fear (of the Unknown)" received moderate airplay on American alternative rock radio, peaking at number 12 on Billboard's Modern Rock Tracks chart.
"Nothing to Fear" is a song by British singer-songwriter Chris Rea, released in October 1992 as the lead single from his twelfth studio album, God's Great Banana Skin. It was written and produced by Rea. [2] "Nothing to Fear" reached number 16 in the UK Singles Chart and remained in the top 75 for four weeks.