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Segments of the music video were featured in The Honeymoon Sampler that was released onto YouTube on September 8, 2015. [13] The video, which was released on February 9, 2016, [ 14 ] features clips of Del Rey, Father John Misty, Chuck Grant and the girls from The Honeymoon Sampler and " Music to Watch Boys To " who were featured earlier in the ...
"Freak" is a song by American rapper and singer Doja Cat released through Kemosabe Records and RCA Records on August 7, 2020. [2] Originally uploaded exclusively to SoundCloud in 2018, it was repackaged and released commercially due to popular demand by fans online. [3] [4] The single samples the 1959 song, "Put Your Head on My Shoulder" by ...
An accompanying music video was released on August 6, 2021, and directed by the band itself. It features the same rerecorded version as in the Rock Band 4 DLC. They talked about the video via TV News Desk: "We never had any intention to make a music video for 'Freaks', but when the opportunity occurred we knew what it needed to be, we had to make a video set in Charles Burns' Black Hole world ...
"Freak" is the debut single by the English rock singer-songwriter and bass guitarist Bruce Foxton, which became a hit and one of his most recognizable songs. It was released on 30 July, 1983, as the lead single from his debut studio album, Touch Sensitive .
"Freak" is a 1997 song by Australian rock band Silverchair, released as the first single from their second album, Freak Show (1997). The song reached number one on the Australian ARIA Singles Chart, Silverchair's second single to do so after "Tomorrow" in 1994. The band would not have another number-one hit until "Straight Lines" in 2007.
The music video sees Jalil Hutchins wearing a feather earring, which he said was a replacement for a wig and "the closest thing I could get that was part funk, part freak." [1] The video features appearances from UTFO and Run-DMC, who are seen leaving a tour bus in Baltimore, [5] and future rapper Jermaine Dupri, then a dancer for Whodini. [6]
An accompanying music video directed by Christian Breslauer features Tyga being seduced by a sultry dressed Doja Cat. The song shares a title with—but has no relation to—a 1978 hit soul single by R&B/funk artist Roy Ayers. Ayers' song "Freaky Deaky" peaked at #29 on the Billboard magazine Hot Soul Singles Chart in 1978.
"Freaks" is a song by alternative rock group Live, which was released as the second single from their 1997 album, Secret Samadhi. The song was not released as a single in the US, but still reached #5 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks chart [2] and #13 on the Modern Rock Tracks chart. [2]