Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
British clubbing magazine Mixmag ranked "Beautiful People" as one of "The 30 Best Vocal House Anthems Ever" in 2018. [5] In 2022, Pitchfork featured it in their list of "The 30 Best House Tracks of the ’90s", writing that "Tucker's sassy, yearning delivery rides a wave of jazzy chord changes, exquisite high notes, and back-to-church organs ...
Released as a single in May 1994 by Go! Discs, it was a top 10 hit in Iceland (5), Ireland (8), Norway (9) and the United Kingdom (9). In the latter, "Carry Me Home" also peaked at number two on the UK Dance Singles Chart, while reaching number 36 on the Eurochart Hot 100 in June 1994. Lindy Heymann directed the song's music video. It was ...
"Power House" is a 1994 song by Swedish dance music duo Rob'n'Raz, featuring American singer Lutricia McNeal and rapper D-Flex. It was released as the third and last single from the duo's third album, Spectrum (1993), and peaked at number 12 in Sweden, [ 1 ] with a total of 12 weeks within the singles chart.
"Hideaway" is a song by American house music group De'Lacy, featuring vocals by Rainie Lassiter. It is the group's most successful single and is written by Kevin Hedge and Josh Milan, produced by Blaze and released by labels Easy Street, deConstruction and BMG.
Since Lady Gaga's "Bad Romance" in 2009, every video that has reached the top of the "most-viewed YouTube videos" list has been a music video. In November 2005, a Nike advertisement featuring Brazilian football player Ronaldinho became the first video to reach 1,000,000 views. [1] The billion-view mark was first passed by Gangnam Style in ...
Prior to "Missing", Everything but the Girl was most known as an indie band; as with many UK bands of the era, their music had folk and jazz leanings. They had released eight albums prior to Amplified Heart and had a number-three UK singles chart success in 1988 ("I Don't Want to Talk About It"), but were relatively unknown in the United States.
In 2015, The Daily Telegraph ranked it number 36 in their "Top 50 Dance Songs" list. [6] In 2020, NME ranked it among "The 20 Best House Music Songs... Ever!". [7] The song was featured on the a fictional SF-UR radio station in the 2004 Video game Grand Theft Auto San Andreas.
UK 1 – Dec 1994, US BB 1 of 1995, Holland 1 – Aug 1994, Sweden 1 – Aug 1994, Austria 1 – Oct 1994, Switzerland 1 – Oct 1994, Norway 1 – Oct 1994, Germany 1 – Jan 1995, New Zealand 1 for 6 weeks Mar 1995, POP 1 of 1995, Germany 18 of the 1990s, US BB 25 of 1995, Australia 41 of 1995, Party 54 of 2007, Scrobulate 72 of party