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One of their earliest actions for their new label, Warner Brothers, was to re-record new versions of their most popular Cadence songs. The new versions of their Cadence songs were joined with their first hits on the WB label to form a new "Greatest Hits" album issued on WB, the album being the 1964 release "The Very Best of the Everly Brothers."
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]
[note 7] By re-recording, Swift is technically covering her own songs as new recordings, resulting in new masters she fully owns, enabling her to control the licensing of her songs for commercial use, known as synchronization, by evading the owners of the older masters and subsequently devaluing them.
The 26-year-old channeled Swift's album artwork with pink and blue wispy clouds and pink cursive letters spelling out the tune's title. He credited the Eras Tour singer as a writer and producer on ...
“Did the accused have access to the original song, and are the songs ‘substantially similar.’” The British star said the song is about the places where she “spent a lot of [her] youth”
N.W.A's debut album Straight Outta Compton (which had attracted controversy for its song "Fuck tha Police") includes the song "Express Yourself", which criticizes the censorship of music by radio stations, and hip-hop musicians who write inoffensive songs to target mainstream radio airplay. "Express Yourself" is the only song on the album to ...
Some songs were written to provoke, while others have fallen foul of misinterpretation. Lizzy Cooney picks some of the most infamous cases of musical censorship ‘Why, why, why?’ – 9 famous ...
Peart named it the song he had worked the hardest on, due to the delicate nature of the subject. [12] The song became a group favorite; Peart cited the track as the reason they would re-record the Presto album, if they could. [15] [failed verification] "Scars" features a complex drum pattern in which both acoustic and electronic drums are utilized.