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Datarock Datarock is the debut studio album by Norwegian dance-punk duo Datarock, released on April 4, 2005.The duo's hit single, "Computer Camp Love", is a playful song based on the 1984 American comedy Revenge of the Nerds and almost parodies "Summer Nights".
Dear Enemy was an Australian indie pop band formed in Melbourne in 1980. [1] The band released a studio album, Ransom Note, in 1984 on EMI and Capitol Records that featured its best known single, "Computer One", a No. 15 hit on the Australian Kent Music Report Singles Chart in January 1984.
A third release, "Computer Age (Push the Button)" reached the R&B top 40. [4] Newcleus released two albums in the mid-1980s, Jam on Revenge and Space Is the Place, although neither sold well. [4] The Cenacs and the Craftons continued to record until 1989. [4]
"Computer Love" is a song performed by American funk band Zapp, issued as the fourth and final single from their fourth studio album The New Zapp IV U.Featuring vocals by Shirley Murdock and Charlie Wilson and written by Murdock, Zapp Band leader Roger Troutman and his brother Larry Troutman, [1] the single peaked at number 8 on the Billboard R&B chart in 1986.
The first ever double-full-length hip-hop solo studio album released for mass consumption globally. [358] Accolades: 13 February 1996 () The Score: Fugees: East Coast hip hop [336] alternative hip hop; progressive rap [359] Ruffhouse/Columbia: Accolades: 11 March 1996 () Second Toughest In The Infants: Underworld Electronic [360] techno
Dirty Computer is the third [4] studio album by American singer and songwriter Janelle Monáe, released on April 27, 2018, by Wondaland Arts Society, Bad Boy Records and Atlantic Records. [5] It is the follow-up to her studio albums The ArchAndroid (2010) and The Electric Lady (2013) and her first album not to continue the Cindi Mayweather ...
The album features musicians including Toots and the Maytals, Horace Andy, Israel Vibration, Sugar Minott and Frankie Paul. [7] The track listing is identical to OK Computer and no songs were changed, except for "Fitter Happier" (which has slightly altered lyrics to fit the style, with permission from Radiohead), and "Paranoid Android".
Most of each of the videos is computer-animated, and each video lasts as long as the studio versions of each song, making them very lengthy. They can all be found on the DVD inside the physical release of This Binary Universe, and all of the videos were put onto iTunes not long after the release of the album. The track listing is: