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The episode features three new songs: "Oh Bubblegum", "Nuts", and the titular "Remember You". [11] [12] Sugar composed the music for all four, and wrote the lyrics (Sanchez co-wrote the lyrics for "Oh Bubblegum"). [11] Sugar recorded demos for the songs and Rob Sugar, Rebecca's father, released the three new demos on his official YouTube account.
"Sugar, Sugar" is a song written by Jeff Barry and Andy Kim, produced by Barry and recorded by The Archies, a fictional bubblegum pop band from Archie Comics. It was released as the group's third single on the Calendar Records label on May 24, 1969, rereleased on the Kirshner Records label in July 1969, and included on their second album ...
"Ag Pleez Deddy" (also known as "The Ballad of the Southern Suburbs") is a South African song written and recorded by Jeremy Taylor, and released in 1962. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It was written for the stage show Wait a Minim! , and has been described as the musical's "showpiece". [ 3 ]
Here's a list of the best songs from the time, ranging from Toto to Michael Jackson. The 1980s produced chart-topping hits in pop, hip-hop, rock, and R&B. Here's a list of the best songs from the ...
The Ohio Express is an American bubblegum pop band formed in Mansfield, Ohio, in 1967. [1] Though marketed as a band, it would be more accurate to say that the name "Ohio Express" served as a brand name used by Jerry Kasenetz's and Jeffry Katz's Super K Productions to release the music of a number of different musicians and acts.
L.A. Boyz (song) Lagi (song) Life's Too Short (Aespa song) Lips Are Movin; The Little Black Egg; Little Willy (song) Live While We're Young; Lollipop (BigBang and 2NE1 song) Lollipop (Mika song) London Boy (song) Love (Lana Del Rey song) Love Grows (Where My Rosemary Goes) Lucky (Britney Spears song) Lust for Life (Lana Del Rey song)
Bubblegum (also called bubblegum pop) is a pop music in a catchy and upbeat style that is marketed for children and adolescents. [13] The term also refers to a more specific rock and pop subgenre, [14] originating in the United States in the late 1960s, that evolved from garage rock, novelty songs, and the Brill Building sound, and which was also defined by its target demographic of preteens ...
The 2-minute-38-second song is in the key of C major, changing later in the song to C sharp / D flat major, with a tempo of 121 beats per minute.. The song makes countless references to candy and sugar, and the narrator compares these two sweet treats to the object of his affection, at some point calling her a "living box of candy wrapped up so very fine" with a "mouthful of such sweet things ...