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The Dreamhouse version was MASSIVELY popular in 1997 in the Philippines. This article should have put more emphasis on the Dreamhouse version rather than the Vengaboys. But the Walkers version was the original--ES 2602:306:CD9B:E9A0:5560:1889:FD95:84E 01:54, 2 May 2017 (UTC) Lets see after Vengaboys did this one.
The Platinum Album is the second studio album by Dutch dance group Vengaboys. The album spawned five singles. The album spawned five singles. In March 2020, the album was re-released to celebrate its 20th anniversary, with the addition of "Take Me to the City", previously only released on the US edition of the album.
It should only contain pages that are Vengaboys songs or lists of Vengaboys songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Vengaboys songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
The single was officially credited to the Vengaboys ft. Cheekah, referring to the animated computer in the music video, which performs the lyrics (all of which are related to computer terminology, but feature some tongue-in-cheek sexual innuendo: e.g. "The way you used your joystick / Has really made my mouse click".
"Sha-La-La-La-La" is a song by Danish glam rock band Walkers. The song was co-written by band members Torben Lendager and Poul Dehnhardt. It entered the Danish charts at number eight in the last week of March 1973, and peaked at number two after three weeks, after which it disappeared from the charts.
The song was written by Vengaboys producers Danski and Delmundo, with the first verse interpolating the ABBA song "Lay All Your Love on Me" written by Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus. [2] It was released to radio in the United States in June 1999 and re-released to US radio in June 2017. [ 3 ]
Part 1 is the first compilation by Dutch dance group Vengaboys'. The album was released in October 1998 in Benelux , just months after the debut album, Up & Down - The Party Album . The album peaked at number 1 on the Dutch charts and was certified platinum.
Pop Rescue wrote in their review, "It's simple – 'up and down, up and down, up…. and down' – not much to remember when you're dancing to it in a club at 3am. Again the thumping beat and bouncy little synth riffs are there, and aside from that simple almost-aerobic exercise set of lyrics, there's not much more to it.