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Who Really Cares is the second studio album by American indie pop band TV Girl. It was self-released on February 26, 2016 [ 1 ] and is described by the band as "an album about sex or lack thereof, and its consequences or lack thereof".
TV Girl frequently samples songs and media from the 1960s in their music. An example of this is seen in the song "Lovers Rock", where the backing track is created from a looped sample of the intro to The Shirelles' 1960 single "The Dance is Over". In a post to Reddit, Petering writes he "..never gets tired of seeking out old and obscure music ...
French Exit is the debut studio album by American indie pop band TV Girl. It was released on June 5, 2014 and follows the release of their first mixtape The Wild, The Innocent, The TV Shuffle and their third EP Lonely Women. [1] The band describe the album's songs as "about lost lust, too much love and not enough." [2]
A nightcore (also known as sped-up song, sped-up version, sped-up remix, or, simply, sped-up edit) is a version of a music track that increases the pitch and speeds up its source material by approximately 35%. This gives an effect identical to playing a 33⅓-RPM vinyl record at 45 RPM.
Within 30 minutes, they recorded the song that became "F.N.F. (Let's Go)". GloRilla recorded a since-deleted Triller video of her lighting a Backwood in the bathroom and playing the song. Through Hitkidd's advice on increasing the song's exposure, GloRilla changed her explicit second verse to boost radio play, and shot a music video for it.
Caramella Girls is a virtual group created by Remixed Records in 2008 to promote the "Caramelldansen" song. They first showed up in the Japanese release "U-u-uma uma" single on 21 May 2008 as two anime character counterparts for the two female vocalists Malin Sundström and Katia Löfgren, removing the rest of the band members. [ 9 ]
This article lists songs and whole discographies which have been banned by the BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) over the years. During its history, the corporation has banned songs from a number of high-profile artists, including Cliff Richard, Frank Sinatra, Noël Coward, the Beatles, Ken Dodd, Elvis Presley, Bing Crosby, the BBC Dance Orchestra, Tom Lehrer, Glenn Miller, and George Formby.
"Girl Code" was partially inspired by de Lesseps' feud with author Carole Radziwill (pictured in 2007). "Girl Code" is a funk-influenced dance song. [2] de Lesseps' daughter, Victoria, provides backing vocals. [1] Dave Quinn and Jessica Fecteau, writers from People, both noted the song's girl power theme, with the former calling it funky. [11] [12]