Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The song was written and produced by the Swedish team Bag & Arnthor (Anders Bagge and Arnthor Birgisson), with Mumba co-writing. "Gotta Tell You" was released on 2 June 2000 and became an international hit, peaking at number one in Ireland and New Zealand, number two in the United Kingdom, and number three in Australia.
An accompanying music video for the song was produced in 1998. It shows Jakobsen clad in a kurta, pagri and dark glasses, driving the streets of Calcutta in an Austin FX4 as he collides with pedestrians and debris, steals the lunch of an unsuspecting restaurant customer, steals a newspaper in a similar manner and hangs outside his taxi window in roller skates as various engine parts are ...
In the music video, the scenes flash between Mumba singing and a wall calendar flipping down the days. [51] After Mumba's initial close-ups, she turns her head, and the video pans to an Asian man's photo hanging on a wall, which continues to show up throughout the clip. [52] Later in the video, Mumba is shown in front of a dancing choir. [53]
"Baby, Come Over (This Is Our Night)" (released outside the United States as "Baby Come On Over") is a song by Irish singer Samantha Mumba, from her debut studio album, Gotta Tell You (2000). The song was written by Mumba, Anders Bagge, and Arnthor Birgisson, while produced by the latter two, Dino Esposito, E. Dawk, and Ron Fair.
The song was written by Hallgeir Rustan and producers Stargate, who recorded it at the producers' Norwegian studio. "Always Come Back to Your Love" was Mumba's second and final song to top the Irish Singles Chart, peaking at number one on the chart dated 22 February 2001. It also entered the top 10 in United Kingdom and Romania, reaching ...
"Sanctify" is a BDSM-referencing dance, dark pop, pop and R&B song, [7] with early 2000s pop music influences. [8] [9] Alexander told Beats 1: "Then the music side of it, I wanted something that felt like it could be Britney-era 'Slave 4 U' meets Timbaland or Neptunes... that's my favorite kind of stuff to listen to."
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 re-issued version removed two songs and included two re-recordings; "Baby, Come Over (This Is Our Night)" and "The Boy", which featured Will.i.am from The Black Eyed Peas, and a new song, "Don't Need You To (Tell Me I'm Pretty)". It was released in the US on 27 March 2001.