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Through an online press conference held on November 4, 2021, SM Entertainment and YouTube announced the remastering project for K-pop music videos. [6] The Remastering Project is a project to remaster music videos from the 1990s and 2000s and showcase them to global music fans through the online video platform. [ 7 ]
The Irish rock band U2 wrote and recorded the song "God Part II" as an answer song to Lennon's "God". Included in U2's 1988 album Rattle and Hum, "God Part II" reprises the "don't believe in" motif from Lennon's song and its lyrics explicitly reference Lennon's 1970 song "Instant Karma!" and American biographer Albert Goldman, author of the controversial book The Lives of John Lennon (1988).
Bad for Good is the only studio album by American songwriter Jim Steinman. Steinman wrote all of the songs and performed on most, although Rory Dodd contributed lead vocals on some tracks. The songs were originally intended to be recorded by Meat Loaf as a follow-up to Bat Out of Hell, titled Renegade Angel. However, Meat Loaf suffered vocal ...
Metal Blade Records reissued a remastered version of New American Gospel in 2006 with four bonus tracks. [7] The remastered version contains a note on the inlay that explains that the sound of the album is less polished than their newer work, in part due to time constraints as well as heavy drinking. It has sold over 100,000 copies in the ...
Despite being pleased that his song was chosen to accompany the broadcast of the moon landing, Bowie said the producers seemed to have overlooked the meaning of the song.
Remastered movies have been the subject of criticism. When the Arnold Schwarzenegger film Predator was remastered, it was felt by some critics that the process was overdone, resulting in Schwarzenegger's skin looking waxy. [11] As well as complaints about the way the picture looks, there have been other complaints about digital fixing. [12]
Good Mourning/Black Friday" is a two-piece song, which begins with an instrumental section called "Good Mourning". [25] Lyrically, Mustaine has described "Black Friday" as being about "a homicidal madman who goes on a killing spree". [17] With an excessive use of gory language and violent imagery, the song chronicles the acts of a serial killer ...
“If we were sad (listening to a song) 20 years ago, we’re going to be sad today, but with a distance from that sadness … so there’s a different sense of enrichment in the experience ...