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"Believe" is a song by the American singer Cher, from her 22nd studio album, Believe (1998). It was released as the lead single on October 19, 1998, by Warner Bros. Records . After circulating for months, a demo written by Brian Higgins , Matthew Gray, Stuart McLennen and Timothy Powell , was submitted to Warner's chairman, Rob Dickins , while ...
Believe is the twenty-second studio album by American singer and actress Cher, released on October 22, 1998, by WEA and Warner Bros. Records.Following the commercial disappointment of her previous studio album It's a Man's World (1995), her record company encouraged her to record a dance-oriented album, in order to move into a more mainstream sound.
"Strong Enough" is a song by American recording artist Cher from her 22nd studio album, Believe (1998). The song was released as the second single from the album on February 22, 1999, by Warner Music.
Cher isn’t as successful at turning back time as she would’ve hoped in a new ad. The Believe singer, 78, shows just how wrong things can get when she tries to take a step back in time — like ...
Cher, 77, talks on the TODAY show about her 2023 album, "Christmas," "Believe" turning 25 and performing at "Christmas in Rockefeller Center."
Cher is currently celebrating the release of her first Christmas album, but she just hit another milestone that she’s far less interested in discussing.. The pop icon, 77, appeared on the ...
The music video for "All or Nothing" was shot while Cher was on tour for her album, Believe.Although most of the video features random clips of some of Cher's Do You Believe? tour performances, new footage was filmed in which Cher sang the song, wore a red wig and a silver outfit rather than the tour costume which Cher herself described as "Bozo the Clown-meets-Braveheart look."
Cher's 1998 song "Believe" was the first commercial recording to use Auto-Tune—an audio processor for correcting off-key vocals—as a stylistic effect, creating a robotic, futuristic sound. [315] [318] Cher, who proposed the effect, [319] faced resistance from her label but insisted it remain, saying, "You can change [the song] over my dead ...