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All of the members have YouTube projects like SKZ-Record and SKZ-Player, where each of them produce, choreograph, or cover songs; [a] Two Kids Song, where the members were paired to write, produce and record an original song with the same beat sample; [b] [222] and SKZ Song Camp: Howl in Harmony, where the members were divided into three teams ...
"If You Tolerate This Your Children Will Be Next" is a song by Welsh alternative rock band Manic Street Preachers. It was released on 24 August 1998, through Epic Records as the first single from their fifth studio album, This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours (1998).
"Row, Row, Row Your Boat" is an English language nursery rhyme and a popular children's song, of American origin, often sung in a round. It has a Roud Folk Song Index number of 19236. Lyrics
The Korean title of the lead single "Thunderous", "Sori-kkun" is inspired by a singer position of pansori of the same name. "Thunderous" was written by the group's production team 3Racha (Bang Chan, Changbin, Han), and JYP in-house production team HotSauce, [4] is a hip hop [10] and trap [10] song that includes various elements of Korean traditional music (gugak), brass instruments, and chuimsae.
Street children are poor or homeless children who live on the streets of a city, town, or village. Homeless youth are often called street kids, ...
Many children's stores and sometimes music outlets sell covers of pop songs, performed by adults for children, especially Christmas songs. These were especially popular during the early 2000s. The use of children's music, to educate, as well as entertain, continued to grow, as evidenced in February 2009, when Bobby Susser 's young children's ...
The song was used in the opening scene of the film The Faculty and appears on the soundtrack album. [6] It is also available as downloadable content for the Rock Band video game series. [7] Q reported that the song's title is an allusion to the Who song "The Kids Are Alright" (from My Generation).
Dating back to at least the mid-20th century, the song is sung to the tune of "The Old Gray Mare". [1] The song, especially popular in school lunchrooms and at summer camps, presents macabre horrors through cheerful comedy while allowing children to explore taboo images and words especially as they relate to standards of cleanliness and dining.