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"Heaven" is a song by Filipino singer Nina from her 2002 debut album of the same name. It was released as the album's first commercial single, and her first single as an artist, in August 2002 along with the album by Warner Music Philippines. The song was written by Brett Laurence and Gary Haase, and produced by Ferdie Marquez.
The music video was directed by Oliver Bradford. It features Yanou, DJ Sammy and Do viewed briefly from a television. The video features two Asian girls, androgynous people and a Black man. It featured a family of four. There is a second version, with extended scenes of a stationary Do singing and no scenes of Yanou.
Speedin' Bullet 2 Heaven was first released through digital music platforms on December 4, 2015, with its physical release arriving on December 18. [60] The album sold 19,365 album equivalent units in its first week, and 14,210 which were from pure album sales, to debut at number 36 on the US Billboard 200 chart. [ 63 ]
The "B'z Live-Gym '90~'91 'Risky'" tour, with 49 performances, also started in November. Their first music video compilation, Film Risky, was recorded in New York City and London in four weeks and was released on December 16. With a barrage of releases, 1990 came to be the busiest year for B'z.
The music video for "Heaven" was directed by Luke Gilford and released on 19 January 2017. [5] According to a representative, Sivan was going to release the video on 20 January, to coincide with Donald Trump's inauguration. However, the release was forward a day due to an overwhelming response from fans to teasers for the clip. [6]
The content included a voice note from the song's writing process, [7] along with behind-the-scenes photos from the photo shoot of Horan's third album and the set of the music video. In February 2023, Horan performed the "Heaven" chorus acoustically whilst appearing on The Late Late Show with James Corden. [8]
The song was released on 7" and 12" vinyl in May 1984. The single brought the band to fame, especially in Australia, where it peaked at No. 2 on the Kent Music Report Singles Chart and became one of the Top 20 biggest-selling singles of 1984. [2] At the 1984 Countdown Music Awards the song won Best Australian Single. [3]
UK release. Contained music videos for the songs featured on the compilation album Greatest Hits. Includes the alternate version of many of Minogue's music videos. Behind-the-features were taken from The Kylie Collection, The Videos 2 and Let's Get to... the Videos. Charted at number nine in the UK. UK: Gold [87] Greatest Hits 87–97