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"Blue (Da Ba Dee)" is a song by Italian music group Eiffel 65. It was first released in October 1998 in Italy by Skooby Records and became internationally successful the following year. [ 3 ] It is the lead single of the group's 1999 debut album, Europop .
I'm Blue may refer to: "Blue (Da Ba Dee)", a song by Eiffel 65 "I'm Blue (The Gong-Gong Song), an Ike Turner song recorded in 1961; I'm Blue, Skies, a 2013 album by Cheyenne Jackson "I'm Blue, I'm Lonesome", a bluegrass song by Bill Monroe
"Move Your Body" is a bubblegum techno and disco song [1] played in D minor at 130 BPM. [2] It has dance-oriented sounds and uses the same pitch shifter–based distortion as the vocals from the previous single, "Blue (Da Ba Dee)". [3]
Maurizio Lobina (born 30 October 1973 in Asti) is an Italian musician and singer, most known as a member of the band Eiffel 65, [1] an Italian group who hit big in 1999 with the international success "Blue (Da Ba Dee)."
"I'm Good (Blue)" is a song by French DJ and producer David Guetta and American singer and songwriter Bebe Rexha. Produced by the former alongside Timofey Reznikov, it was written by the artists alongside Kamille and Plested, with additional writing credits going to Jeffrey Jey, Massimo Gabutti, and Maurizio Lobina, as the song is a reworking of Italian group Eiffel 65's single "Blue (Da Ba ...
Released in November 1961, [1] the song became a national hit reaching No. 19 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 3 on the R&B chart. [3] "I'm Blue (The Gong-Gong Song)" was the fifth hit single associated with the Ike & Tina Turner Revue and the first of three charting singles for the original Ikettes between 1962 and 1965.
"Some Say" is a song by Swedish singer Nea and was released as her debut single on 6 September 2019. [1] Following the song's success in Europe in late 2019 and early 2020, the song was remixed by German DJ Felix Jaehn. [2] The remix was released on 10 January 2020.
It became popular as a minstrel song, and the tune was also taken up by the U.S. Military Academy as a graduating class song, called "Army Blue"; new lyrics by L. W. Becklaw were sung to the original melody. [1] The Civil War began shortly after the song's release; "Aura Lea" was adopted by soldiers on both sides, and was often sung around ...