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"Cheap Thrills" is a song by Australian singer and songwriter Sia from her seventh studio album, This Is Acting (2016). It was written by Sia and Greg Kurstin , and produced by Kurstin. It was originally released on 17 December 2015, and an official remix version of "Cheap Thrills" featuring Jamaican singer Sean Paul was made available for ...
A nightcore (also known as sped-up song, sped-up version, sped-up remix, or, simply, sped-up edit) is a version of a music track that increases the pitch and speeds up its source material by approximately 35%. This gives an effect identical to playing a 33⅓-RPM vinyl record at 45 RPM.
Cheap Thrills was a critical and commercial success, reaching number one on the Billboard Top LPs chart for eight nonconsecutive weeks in 1968. In 2007, Cheap Thrills was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame. [2] Rolling Stone magazine ranked the album number 338 in its 2003 list of the "500 Greatest Albums of All Time". [3]
An acoustic version of the band's track "Codependence" was used as the soundtrack for Liverpool Football Club's 2022/2023 European kit [24] with the bands lyrics "We'll follow for a lifetime and a day" as the campaigns tagline. [25] In 2022, The Cheap Thrills won Liverpool Band of The Year Award 2022 presented by Sound Music Group. [26]
Cheap Thrills is a compilation album by Frank Zappa, with material from previously released albums. The album spent five weeks on the UK Top 100 Chart, peaking at 83. [2]
"Cheap Thrills" is written in common time with a tempo of 90 beats per minute. The song's chord progression, F♯m–D–A–E, may be read either as i-VI-III-VII in F ♯ minor or, more likely, as vi-IV-I-V in A major; it is a variant of the I–V–vi–IV_progression .
"Cheap Thrills" (song), a 2016 song by Sia "Cheap Thrills", a 1968 song by Frank Zappa from Cruising with Ruben & the Jets "Cheap Thrills", a 1983 song by David Allan Coe
The instrumental segments lift bits from "Emergency" off 1, "T.N.T." and "Bang a Gong (Get It On)" while the lyrics quote "Eight Days a Week" "5:15" and "Long Time Gone" by The Everly Brothers. [citation needed] The live version of the song on Cheap Trick at Budokan is similar to the version on Dream Police. [3]