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The Rolling Stone Album Guide: Completely New Reviews : Every Essential Album, Every Essential Artist (3rd ed.). Random House. ISBN 0-679-73729-4. Du Noyer, Paul (2007). Liverpool – Wondrous Place: From the Cavern to the Capital of Culture. Virgin Books. ISBN 978-0-75351-269-2. Echols, Alice (2010). Hot Stuff: Disco and the Remaking of ...
Among our list of the best karaoke songs, we've got the classics you know and love from the best female country singers, pop and rock hits that'll have the whole room dancing, and breakup songs ...
In reggae music, it is not uncommon for a whole album to be remixed in a dub style. [6] [7] Jennifer Lopez's album J to tha L–O! The Remixes (2002) is listed in the Guinness Book of World Records as the first remix album to debut at No.1 on the Billboard 200 chart. [8]
Disco 2 is the second remix album by English synth-pop duo Pet Shop Boys, released on 12 September 1994 by Parlophone.It consists of remixes of songs from the duo's albums Behaviour (1990) and Very (1993), as well as B-sides from the time.
Furthermore, the "Studio 2054 Remix" featuring Dua Lipa was released on December 31 and was repackaged on the Disco: Guest List Edition of the parent album. [81] The remix featured updated production, handled by Lipa's musical director William Bowerman, as well as an extended instrumental section in the middle of the song.
Good Times: The Very Best of the Hits & the Remixes is a two-disc compilation album, of recordings by American R&B bands Chic and Sister Sledge, released by Warner Music in 2005, an expanded re-release of 1999's single-disc compilation The Very Best of Chic & Sister Sledge. Disc one contains the original recordings made between the years 1973 ...
Disco is the first remix album by English synth-pop duo Pet Shop Boys, released on 17 November 1986 [5] by Parlophone in the United Kingdom and by EMI America Records in the United States. Disco consists of remixes of tracks from the band's debut album Please and its respective B-sides .
This article lists songs of the C vs D "mash-up" genre that are commercially available (as opposed to amateur bootlegs and remixes). As a rule, they combine the vocals of the first "component" song with the instrumental (plus additional vocals, on occasion) from the second.