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A music video was released on April 12, 2021. Later that year, a remix, "Binibini (Last Day On Earth)", was released as a duet with James TW and features rewritten English lyrics. Composition
The track became popular on video-sharing social media platform TikTok in late 2020, and peaked at number 24 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. It was included on lists of the best songs of 2020 published by Vice and NPR. [1] [2] A remix of the song with American rapper DaBaby and American hip hop duo City Girls was released on January 21, 2021.
The music video for "Tik Tok" was directed by Syndrome. [52] It was shot in Kesha's old neighborhood and the car featured in the video belongs to her. [53] Kesha explained the experience saying, "the video I'm excited about because I actually got to shoot it in my old neighborhood and the guy driving my gold car is a friend of mine". [53]
The song also gained traction due to a viral dance challenge. The video, published on TikTok, featured the Ama Quality Boys, a dance group, dancing to a completely different Amapiano song, until an unknown user put the "Tshwala Bam" audio onto that video and the song and dance became viral. The video now has over 77,000 likes as of July 2024. [3]
"2 Phút Hơn" or "Hai Phút Hơn" (translates as "Over Two Minutes") is a 2020 Vinahouse house [1] song by Pháo. Several remixes of the song were made. [2] One by DJ/producer Kaiz was released on November 28, 2020, and gained global popularity, [3] [4] one of a number of Vietnamese songs to become popular on TikTok through its dance covers.
When videos featuring the aesthetic first appeared on TikTok, they were known by the term nichetok, [1] which is considered by media writers and users as a sister trend to corecore. [10] Though technically different, the two terms are often used interchangeably by TikTok users. [ 5 ]
Musicians like Doja Cat and Lil Nas X are two current musicians that have culminated their music in the TikTok remix culture. For example, " Remember (Walking In The Sand) " the 1960s song by the Shangri-Las has recently been remixed to an EDM track that brought more attention to the song and a following into it due to a popular TikTok trend ...
Fans noticed a petrol pump labelled "13" in the background and associated it with Swift's favorite number, 13. The band teased fans a potential collaboration with Swift again, via videos on TikTok. [3] [2] The remix of "Gasoline" featuring Swift was included on the expanded edition of Women in Music Pt. III.