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"Tik Tok" (Chinese: 倒数; pinyin: Dàoshǔ) is a song by Chinese–Hong Kong singer-songwriter G.E.M., serving as the lead single for her extended play My Fairytale (2018). The single was written by G.E.M. and produced by Austrian songwriter Lupo Groinig. It was released via digital download and streaming on
On June 26, the track listing was released with "Party O'Clock" announced as the lead single. [2] On June 30, the highlight medley teaser video was released. [3] On July 9, the music video teaser was released. [4] The song was released alongside the album and its music video on July 11. [5]
"Countdown" is a song recorded by American singer and songwriter Beyoncé Knowles for her fourth studio album, 4 (2011). The song was written by Knowles, Terius Nash, Shea Taylor, Ester Dean, Cainon Lamb, Julie Frost, Michael Bivins, Nathan Morris and Wanya Morris, and produced by Beyoncé, Taylor and Lamb.
"The Final Countdown" became a success on the charts worldwide following its release during 1986 and 1987, reaching number one in 25 countries (including the UK, where it spent two weeks at the top and is Europe's only Top 10 hit to date), [17] and is widely regarded as the band's most popular and recognizable song.
Download QR code ; Print/export ... "Countdown" is a song by DJs and producers Hardwell and MAKJ. Background. In September 2013, a teaser was posted by Revealed ...
The song is literally "gallows humor", as it is sung by a man awaiting his own execution by hanging. Each verse consists of two lines, of which the first line is anything from humorous to poignant, and the second line is a minute-by-minute countdown. Well they're buildin' the gallows outside my cell. I got 25 minutes to go.
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
"3 O'Clock Things" is composed in 4 4 time signature in the key of B major and follows a tempo of 94 beats per minute (bpm). The song's intro and bridge vocal melodies were inspired by close-harmony choirs featured in the 1940s jump blues song " Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy ", similarly to the band's previous album, Neotheater , which took ...