Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A nightcore (also known as sped-up song, sped-up version, sped-up remix, or, simply, sped-up edit) is a version of a music track that increases the pitch and speeds up its source material by approximately 35%. This gives an effect identical to playing a 33⅓-RPM vinyl record at 45 RPM.
The Really Useful Group has, in the past, set up sub-labels to cater for pop and dance acts, such as Carpet Records, featuring Timmy Mallett's Bombalurina ("Itsy Bitsy Teeny Weeny Yellow Polka Dot Bikini") and Doctor Spin ("Tetris"); and ‘’It Records’’, home to My Life Story in the late 1990s. The name Carpet Records was a play on the ...
Japanese music distributor Exit Tunes gained the rights from the original Caramell producers, Remixed Records, to distribute the sped-up version of the original song in Asia, releasing first an album in April 2008 called Uma Uma Dekiru Trance wo Tsukutte Mita which included "Caramelldansen" (named "U-u-uma uma" (Speedycake Remix)) and other popular meme songs at the time.
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
The first film released by Simitar was the children's film Shinbone Alley, which was retailed at $39.95, and a soundtrack album would be marketed through television commercials. [2] Simitar bought Pickwick Records. Simitar was a long-time leader in budget VHS throughout the 80s and early 90s.
"Sing-A-Long" (Shanks & Bigfoot song) "Sing Along" (Rodney Atkins song) "Sing Along" (Per Gessle song) "Sing Along", a song by Jimmy Dean, theme song to the music television show Sing Along with Mitch "Sing-A-Long", a song by alternative rock band A from their 1997 debut album How Ace Are Buildings; Wee Sing Sing-Alongs, a 1990 album of the Wee ...
Originally released as Winnie the Pooh: Sing a Song with Pooh Bear, later reissued in the Sing Along Songs series under a new name with new songs. Also released in the UK, but only the original VHS version. Featured at the end of the original release from 1999, Gopher hosts "How to Draw", as he shows you how to draw Pooh's face.
LaCarte was sent a sped up sample of this composition from her sister. [2] Disney did not allow the sample to be used in the single, so an original recording sung by the Boomtang Boys member Rob DeBoer was created and used instead. The rap portion of the song was performed by the other member, Tony Grace. [2]