Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Background music (British English: piped music) is a mode of musical performance in which the music is not intended to be a primary focus of potential listeners, but its content, character, and volume level are deliberately chosen to affect behavioral and emotional responses in humans such as concentration, relaxation, distraction, and excitement.
The YouTube channel "ChilledCow" was created by Dimitri Somoguy [21] [22] on 18 March 2015. [23] ChilledCow began streaming lo-fi hip hop music, branding it as relaxation music for those who are working or studying on 25 February 2017.
"Notion" is about religion, specifically not believing in it. The opening lines, "Sure it's a calming notion, perpetual in motion, but I don't need the comfort of any lies" And the ending lines, “Sure it’s a calming notion, but it’s a lie” Describe how religious texts calm people, though what it tells might not be true.
A music video to accompany the release of "If You Ever Want to Be in Love" was first released onto YouTube on 29 October 2015 at a total length of four minutes and forty-three seconds. [4] The clip was directed by Sophie Mueller and was filmed at Fiddler's Elbow in Camden, a pub James often played before becoming famous. [5]
Chilled Euphoria is a DJ mix album digitally mixed by British DJ Red Jerry as part of the Telstar TV's Euphoria series of DJ mixed dance music compilations. Chilled Euphoria features chill-out music, in the form of genres such as ambient music and trip hop, cross-licensed from different artists.
Before the release of News at 11, YouTube user Wav Flv released Reptilian TV, a vaporwave mix featuring an image of the Twin Towers on fire. Although the original video was later deleted, another user re-uploaded it, where Elzinga commented, "Indeed this was the inspiration for News at 11 , or at least started the spark of the flame it would ...
"Miracle" is a pop song consisting of elements from '90s rock music. [7] [8] According to Rolling Stone ' s Jon Blistein, the song features "booming percussion cut with laser-like synths" and "an Imagine Dragons-esque drop", [9] with "the production moving between sparse, airy verses and a speaker-rattling chorus". [10]
The official music video was released alongside the single. It was co-directed by Cameron Logan Cox and Chris Stempel. [7] The video begins with Dwayne Johnson conversing with Tech N9ne; the two declare that they are going to "give the people more." When Johnson raps, he is "looking fierce as always in a black tank top". [8]