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Wartke got the idea of making a humorous rap-like song and video based on the tongue twister, while Fisher created the music and lyrics. [2] [15] [16] Wartke often makes comedic songs from German tongue twisters, which he says he frequently discovers on speech therapy websites. [16] When asked if Barbara is a real person, Wartke replied: "Sure!
For these two songs, a joint 33-minute music video was shot under the direction of Daniel Zlotin, which, with production costs of around 200,000 euros, is considered the most expensive music video in German rap history. [29] [30] The album Yellow Bar Mitzvah was released on 22 April 2022, and reached number one on the German album charts. [31]
Later in 2020, she released her song "Hoe's Up G's Down". Later, she released the song "Never Know" with German rapper Luciano, which debuted in the top 10 in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. Her second studio album, Bitches brauchen Rap, was released on 19 November 2021. In 2023, Shirin David was featured as a coach on The Voice of Germany.
File:SpongeBob SquarePants Help Wanted title-card.jpg File:SpongeBob SquarePants Mid-Life Crustacean title card.png File:SpongeBob's Big Birthday Blowout (title card).png
SpongeBob, the title cheery yellow character, appears outside his pineapple-shaped home, while Mr. Krabs, SpongeBob’s cranky boss, is at the Krusty Krab restaurant he runs.
The song, named after the American singer and actress Barbra Streisand, relies almost entirely on a sample replay of German disco group Boney M.'s 1979 international hit single "Gotta Go Home", [3] which in turn borrows content from the 1973 German song "Hallo Bimmelbahn" by the band Nighttrain (the brothers Heinz and Jürgen Huth and Michael Holm; the hookline was written only by Heinz Huth).
Director Robert Eggers acknowledged that many young people — whether millennials or members of Gen Z — may recognize the vampire Nosferatu not from the 1922 film but because of a children's ...
"Göttingen" is a song written and recorded as a single in 1964 by French singer Barbara, who later also recorded a German language version. [1] The song, which appeared on Barbara's album Le Mal de vivre, has been credited with having contributed to improved relations between France and Germany in the years after the Second World War.