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Torn Down is a 2018 remix album by British alternative rock band The Cure, and a sequel to the 1990 remix album Mixed Up.It was released on Record Store Day 2018 (21 April, Robert Smith's 59th birthday), as was a remastered version of Mixed Up. [1]
The whole images of the album were taken by the Korean ekip, and Ms. Lưu Thiên Hương was the main co-producer. The album marked Vũ Cát Tường in music was 5 years old and Vũ Cát Tường in life has turned 26. The 10 songs clearly reflect the path that Tường chose, and her view of work, love, original and freedom. [35]
Control: The Remixes (issued as More Control in Japan) is the first remix album (and fourth album overall) by American recording artist Janet Jackson.Released on November 6, 1987 in the United Kingdom, Europe and Japan only, it contains remixes of singles from Control, following the success of the album.
To date, this album is the only album to have "Prostye Dvizheniya". "Ne Ver, Ne Boysia, Ne Prosi" was released as a single as well. The song was used for the Eurovision Song Contest in 2003. The group represented Russia in Riga, Latvia. The group were placed third. A music video was released on their official YouTube account. [1]
Video albums by individual artists should not be put in this main category. Instead, they should be placed in their own subcategories of Category:Video albums by artist, under the format [[Category:(Artist name) video albums]]. The only video albums in this category should be compilation albums of many artists, or articles about series of video ...
TKOL RMX 1234567 is a remix album of songs from the album The King of Limbs (2011) by the English rock band Radiohead.It was released on 16 September 2011 in Japan and on 10 October 2011 internationally by XL Recordings.
The Remixes is the first remix album by South Korean girl group Twice, released on November 22, 2023, through JYP Entertainment.An English-language album, it includes seven tracks, including four remixes of the group's songs by various producers, the English versions of "Alcohol-Free" and "Cry for Me", and a version of "I Can't Stop Me" with the American pop-punk band Boys Like Girls.
Yes Remixes is a remix album featuring the songs of progressive rock band Yes and was released in 2003. Taking material harking back from 1970's Time and a Word to 1980s Drama, Virgil Howe a.k.a. "The Verge" (and son of Steve Howe) re-imagined Yes's music into a techno context, dramatically altering the band's sound. Although it briefly dented ...