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There are thousands of kid-friendly songs out there to spice up your rainy days and roadtrips. Our list of the best of the best contains a decent dose of Disney mixed with some recent pop anthems.
Musically, "Happy Working Song" shares similarities with the songs "Heigh-Ho" from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, "The Work Song" from Cinderella and "Something There" from Beauty and the Beast. The song has garnered vastly positive reviews, with both film and music critics praising its humorous, witty lyrics, allusions and references to ...
"Friendly Fire" is a song by American rock band Linkin Park. Originally recorded during sessions for their seventh studio album, One More Light (2017), it was later officially released on February 23, 2024, as the lead single from the greatest hits album Papercuts (Singles Collection 2000–2023) and features vocals from Chester Bennington that were recorded before his death in 2017.
Prior to being released as a single, "The Box" became Roddy Ricch's highest-charting song of his career, reaching the top of the US Billboard Hot 100; the song later became the album's fourth single. [6] The album also received generally positive reviews from music critics and was a massive commercial success.
"Loud" is the debut single by American pop rock band R5, from their second EP of the same name. It was released on February 19, 2013, digitally and physically with the rest of the EP's tracks and was later included on the band's debut full-length album Louder (2013) as the lead single.
An official music video for "Radio-Friendly Pop Song" was released on Fishel's YouTube channel on 10 March 2013, produced by Tyjens Media and animated by Kenneth Wilcox. [7] The video is a lyric video which incorporates all the song's lyrics, animated at a fast pace in time to the song.
[42] [43] The song became Cole's fifth top 10 hit on the US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart by peaking at number seven, while it reached number three on the Rhythmic chart. [ 38 ] [ 44 ] [ 45 ] On September 2, 2016, "Crooked Smile" was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for pushing 1,000,000 certified units ...
For Brockman, the song is a declaration of "liberation from a significant other". [20] Explaining its title, author Robin James in the book Resilience & Melancholy: Pop Music, Feminism, Neoliberalism wrote it does not romanticize "bad" things but is only "pointing out the badness of conventionally-scripted pop song 'romance' itself". [24]