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"W.I.T.C.H." is an acronym for "Woman In Total Control (of) Herself". [6] Cole described the song as reclaiming "the witch as a symbol of women's resistance. It celebrates women's strength, autonomy, and rebellion". [1] The song was written by Nelson, Cole and Alexandra Soumalias, and produced by Nelson. [5]
The A's released their second album, A Woman's Got the Power, in 1981. Also produced by Chertoff, the album entered the U.S. Billboard charts, while the title track peaked at number 18 on the Top Rock Tracks chart and number 26 in Canada.
You're a Woman, I'm a Machine is the debut studio album by Canadian rock duo Death from Above 1979. It was released October 26, 2004, through Last Gang Records . The album was produced by Al-P who would later work alongside Jesse F. Keeler in the electronic music duo MSTRKRFT .
Adam sang the song at the 1977 National Women's Conference in Houston, and it became a feminist as well as a gay anthem promoting LGBT rights in the United States. [18] 1980: Dolly Parton "9 to 5" 9 to 5 and Odd Jobs: Created for the playful-but-anti-patriarchal comedy film 9 to 5, the song was picked up as an anthem for women working in the ...
The song was released as the album's second single to urban contemporary radio on October 3, 2017. The track, produced by Don Cannon and Ike Beatz, samples vocals from Oh Wonder's 2015 song "Landslide". [3] It would debut at number 39 on the Billboard Hot 100, with the YouTube visual gaining over 138 million views as of April 2023. The remix to ...
It is a reggaeton song about exalting the attributes of women with breast and butt implants, an allegory to remix versions being better than the originals. Commercially, "Remix" reached number 147 on the Billboard Global 200 , as well as number one in Monitor Latino 's Puerto Rico and Mexico and the US Latin Airplay chart, as well as number ...
Rage (also known as rage music, [1] [2] rage rap, [3] or rage beats [4] [5] [6]) is a microgenre of trap music. [3] [7] Distinguishing features of rage include short looping stereo-widened future bass-influenced synthesizer lead hooks and basic, energetic trap rhythms. [4] [7] [8] Among the pioneers of rage are rappers Playboi Carti, Lil Uzi ...
The group played the song live for the first time at its reunion show at Coachella 2007. This version of the song was the intro music to "The Big Mad Morning Show" on 92.1 The Beat in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The music video directed by Steven Murashige was a montage of film stock-footage clips, as the band had broken up when the video was released. [3]