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"Stutter" was first released in November 1993 for the independent Deceptive label. It was released initially as a 7" only and sold out within one day. [7] Although it was a limited edition of only 1,500 pressings, the single generated enormous media exposure for the band: based solely on the strength of it, Elastica was voted Best New Band in the year's-end Readers Poll in Melody Maker. [8]
The original version of the song was produced by Roy "Royalty" Hamilton and Teddy Riley and written by Roy "Royalty" Hamilton and Ernest E. Dixon. [ 1 ] A remix by Allen "Allstar" Gordon Jr. [ 2 ] (marketed as the "Double Take Remix" due to its appearance in the 2001 film Double Take ) features rapper Mystikal and was a number-one hit on the US ...
"Stutter" is a song by Canadian pop rock band Marianas Trench. It was released to radio airplay on December 4, 2012, as the fourth single from their third studio album Ever After . [ 3 ] The song peaked on the Canadian Hot 100 chart at number 28 and was certified double platinum in Canada in October 2016.
Stutter, a 1986 album by the band James "Stutter", a 1989 song by James from One Man Clapping "Stutter" (Elastica song), a 1993 song by Britpop group Elastica "Stutter" (Joe song), a 2000 song by American R&B singer Joe "Stutter" (Maroon 5 song), a 2010 song by Maroon 5 from Hands All Over; Stutter edit, a technique employed by musicians like BT
Remixes of songs very frequently employed the effect. Starting in the 1990s stuttering effects fell out of popular use in music. [citation needed] In 1995, stutterer Scatman John turned his problem into his asset and wrote the hit song "Scatman". Stuttering assisted him to scat sing and create incredible sounds. The lyrics are inspirational and ...
Before she was Disney’s iconic Mary Poppins or the Baker’s Wife in “Into the Woods,” Emily Blunt was just a little girl struggling with a stutter. Even today the actor still considers ...
"K-K-K-Katy" is a World War I-era song written by Canadian-American composer Geoffrey O'Hara in 1917 and published in 1918. The sheet music advertised it as "The Sensational Stammering Song Success Sung by the Soldiers and Sailors", as well as "The Sensational New Stammering Song" [1] The song was first played at a garden party fund-raiser for the Red Cross in Collins Bay on Lake Ontario.
Notably, Wire's "I Am the Fly" has a chorus similar to Elastica's "Line Up" and the intro synthesizer part in Elastica's "Connection" (later also repeated on guitar) is lifted from the guitar riff in Wire's "Three Girl Rhumba" and transposed a semitone, while "Waking Up" bore a marked resemblance to the Stranglers' song "No More Heroes". The ...