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Garrix debuted "Pizza" as his closing track at Tomorrowland 2017. On 30 July 2017, A fan tweeted to Garrix speculating the title of the song, to which Garrix replied: "It's actually called Pizza." [2] It was used as the background music in a recap video for his performances in Ibiza, which was published on 10 August 2017. [3]
Jim from Backseat Mafia said "'Pizza Guy' opens with these gently pulsating analogue synths, as these chords underneath stay static, like a carpet. As it progresses there's more evidence of that classic 80s sound – the wiry electronic sounds, the warm, plopping bassline as it develops into something that brings the funk to the party, almost Prince style in some ways."
The word pizza was first documented in 997 AD in Gaeta [4] and successively in different parts of central and southern Italy. Furthermore, the Etymological Dictionary of the Italian Language explains the word pizza as coming from dialectal pinza, 'clamp', as in modern Italian pinze, 'pliers, pincers, tongs, forceps'.
YouTube Music is a music streaming service developed by the American video platform YouTube, a subsidiary of Alphabet's Google. The service is designed with an interface that allows users to simultaneously explore music audios and music videos from YouTube-based genres, playlists and recommendations.
The "Bad Lip Reader" behind the channel is an anonymous music and video producer from Texas. [5] The first Bad Lip Reading video released was a spoof of Rebecca Black's song "Friday", titled "Gang Fight". [6] New music and lyrics were matched to Black's video to make it appear as though she were singing about gang warfare.
On Feb. 9, TikToker @noraeinhellll posted a video calling Pizza Hut to “hear the wing song again,” and it went viral, garnering more than 2.4 million views — and once you hear the song, you ...
[3] Alan Jones from Music Week wrote, "Easily my favourite single of the week is "Happiness", the barnstorming release from Norman Cook's latest alter-ego Pizzaman. Its swirl of influences include jazzy piano frills, gospelly vocals, a backbeat lifted from " Break 4 Love ", Sixties-style organ, Seventies-style synth and much more.
This AI-generated commercial for a fake pizza place called Pepperoni Hug Spot is absolutely terrifying (Pizza Later via YouTube) “Text-to-video technology is still in its infancy, so the quality ...