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On YouTube, the song had gained around 69 million views by March 2016, [7] 220 million by June 2021, [8] 312 million by 2023, [citation needed] and 372 million by 2024. [citation needed] After the song's release, The Living Tombstone created songs based on the second and third games in the Five Nights at Freddy's franchise, titled "It's Been So Long" and "Die In A Fire" respectively. [9]
Five Nights at Freddy's (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the soundtrack to the 2023 film Five Nights at Freddy's based on the video game franchise of the same name created by Scott Cawthon. The soundtrack consisted of the score written, composed and produced by the Newton Brothers , and was released alongside the film on October 27, 2023 ...
One Hour is the eleventh full-length album by German electronic music outfit Cluster. It was recorded live in the studio in Vienna, Austria in July 1994 and released on January 24, 1995, on the U.S.-based Gyroscope label. Precisely one hour of music was culled from four hours of improvisation in the studio.
One Song may refer to: "One Song" (Disney song), a song from the 1937 Disney film soundtrack Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs "One Song" (Tevin Campbell song), a 1991 song by Tevin Campbell "One Song" (Prince song), a 1999 song by Prince "One Song" (Envy song), a 2013 song by Norwegian duo Envy "One Song" (Archie Roach song), a 2022 song by ...
"7 Skies H3" is a single, 24-hour-long song contained in an EP, 24 Hour Song Skull. Although compiled as a contiguous, day-long song, it was recorded in separate pieces ranging anywhere from 25 minutes to 7 hours. [1] The song was released in a limited edition of 13 copies, on flash drives encased in real human skulls, for Halloween 2011.
40-Hour Week is the ninth studio album from American country music band Alabama. Released in January 1985, the album included three songs that topped the Billboard magazine Hot Country Singles chart and continued the band's dominance during the 1980s. The album peaked at number one on the Billboard Country Albums chart and number 28 on the ...
Published in 1926, the song was first recorded by Clarence Williams' Blue Five with vocalist Eva Taylor in 1927. [1] It was popularized by the 1930 recording by McKinney's Cotton Pickers, who used it as their theme song [2] and by Louis Armstrong's record for Okeh Records (catalogue No.41448), both of which featured in the charts of 1930. [3]
"Hourglass" is the first single released from Squeeze's seventh album, Babylon and On. Aided by an optical illusion-filled music video directed by Ade Edmondson, it received substantial airplay on MTV, and "Hourglass" became the highest-charting hit the band ever had in the United States, peaking at number 15 on the Billboard Hot 100, while reaching number 16 in the UK Singles Chart.