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The song's accompanying music video, which was filmed in early February 2000 in Los Angeles, California. It was directed by Evan Bernard and produced by Keeley Gould.. The music video starts with the band performing the song on and around a giantess (named Val/Vallery in the credits and played by Pamela Anderson) who wears a white two-piece bikini and platform high-heeled shoes.
"I'll Feel a Whole Lot Better" is a song by the Los Angeles folk rock band the Byrds, first released in June 1965 on the B-side of the band's second single, "All I Really Want to Do". [3] Despite initially being released as a B-side, the song managed to chart in its own right in the U.S., just outside the Billboard Hot 100 .
"If I Ever Feel Better" is a song by French band Phoenix, released on 1 June 2000 as the third single from their debut studio album, United. It contains a sample of Japanese jazz musician Toshiyuki Honda 's 1979 track "Lament", which was written by Chikara Ueda. [ 1 ]
Dr. Feelgood (stylized as D℞.FEELGOOD) is the fifth studio album by American heavy metal band Mötley Crüe, released on August 28, 1989. Dr. Feelgood topped the Billboard 200 chart, making it the band's only album to claim this position.
"You Can Feel Bad" is a song written by Matraca Berg and Tim Krekel, and recorded by American country music artist Patty Loveless. It was released in December 1995 as the first single from her eighth album, The Trouble with the Truth (1996).
On the verge of his 99th birthday, film legend Dick Van Dyke said he's not afraid to die.. The Emmy-winning actor starred in Coldplay's new music video for the track "All My Love," in which Van ...
It reached #4 on the R&B chart, briefly returning Brown to the Top Ten after a year's absence, and #45 on the Billboard Hot 100. [2] [3] Thanks to its chart success, the song became Brown's biggest hit of the late 1970s. The song's lyrics urge listeners to "Get up offa that thing
The Evening Mail agreed; it argued the "rock-lite" song, while sounding lush, failed to "make you really sit up and take notice". [ 32 ] Despite being highly critical of Odyssey Number Five , Allmusic 's Dean Carlson labelled it, alongside "Odyssey #5", as one of the album's best songs, for the riff Powderfinger executed "better than most bands ...