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"As It Was" was the last song written for Styles' third album, Harry's House. [9] The song was recorded at Sony Music Entertainment CEO Rob Stringer's house in England. In an interview with Consequence of Sound, producer Kid Harpoon stated "We moved all the furniture out and put a drum kit in the TV room.
Straight Outta Lynwood is the twelfth studio album by the American parody musician "Weird Al" Yankovic, released on September 26, 2006, the title drawing inspiration from hip hop group N.W.A's Straight Outta Compton. [1]
Slowed + reverb is a poor imitation of what chopped and screwed music is." [18] Moore had mixed feelings about the phenomenon, saying, "I always felt that I shouldn’t touch chopped and screwed music. One, it’s not really screwed if it’s not by Screw. Two, the chops are sacred to the culture, and not everybody can imitate it.
Radio disc jockey Paul Baskerville, who does not remember playing the song, [7] suspected that it was a demo recording that was played once by an NDR presenter and then thrown away. [ 13 ] One article from March 2021 claimed that the song was likely written and performed by Viennese singer Christian Brandl and drummer Ronnie Urini in 1983, with ...
The "You know" involves F ♯ –D ♯ melody notes against a I (D chord). A point of interest is the raised A melody note against a D/F ♯ chord on "name", "three" and "name". [ 7 ] A significant moment is the Tonicization of the dominant with the use of vii o 7 /V chord (G ♯ dim) as part of the progression to V 7 (A 7 chord on "You know my ...
In 1984, Diana Ross covered the song. It appears on the album Swept Away. [6] This version was later sampled in the 2011 vaporwave song "リサフランク420 / 現代のコンピュー" ("Lisa Frank 420 / Modern Computing") by Macintosh Plus, [7] where it was slowed down and chopped and screwed, with the pitch changed. It became an Internet ...
I said, ‘I don’t know, it’s just coming out.’ So we wrote ’em down, and then I guess within an hour the song had basically written itself." [3] The song is about the breakup of a relationship. According to Currington, the line "But you drug my heart through the Alabama dirt" was inspired by a past relationship. [2]
"Real Life (I Never Was the Same Again)" is a song written by Neil Thrasher and Jim Janosky, and recorded by American country music artist Jeff Carson. It released in May 2001 as the third single from his third album, Real Life. The song was written by Neil Thrasher and Jim Janosky. [1]