Adele broke her music fast after three years with the song and music video Hello, delighting millions of her fans around the world, who are already eagerly awaiting her new album titled 25, which will be released on November 20, 2015.
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"The world, stop, we'd like to get out." That's how the British Independent published a list of ten music videos that have exceeded one billion views on YouTube. All those of you who have already given up on the future can just stop reading, but for everyone else, here is a list that is not really a surprise. There are eight musicians in the elite club who cannot be classified as top musicians, but as if that matters at all. Wiz Khalifa was the latest to join the over-a-billion-views-on-YouTube club with See You Again, making him the first hip-hop artist in history to achieve the feat. Find out who the other YouTube "billionaires" are and who is the absolute king of YouTube below.
After the song, the creators of the latest James Bond movie served us a video for the title song of Spectre, Writing's On The Wall, sung by Sam Smith. Interspersed among the melancholic scenes with the British singer are some new scenes from the upcoming film Spectre, coming to us on November 5, 2015, which reveal what's behind the explosions, daring actions and pretty girls.
The Slovenian vocal band Perpetuum Jazzille, which has already exceeded 50 million views on YouTube with a series of its videos, has added a new strong magnet to it with an exclusive vocal cover and video for the song Footloose by Kenny Loggins. It is the first in a series of videos that PJs are hoping for in the 2015/16 season. Our sold-out a capella group deep into the future is waiting for a hot autumn, first of all the triple premiere of the new concert program in Cankarjev dom, followed by a trip to distant China, France, Estonia and so on.
Rihanna is no joke. Throughout her career, the Barbadian beauty has been pushing the boundaries of what's tasteful in music, and in the latest music video for Bitch Better Have My Money, she's gone a step further than the nudity we're used to on red carpets, where she often goes braless and in dresses that barely they leave it to the imagination. But nudity is the least shocking thing. With so much blood, Maroon 5 Animals' video looks like a children's cartoon, not to mention the violence.
Beyoncé managed to surprise her fans again, as she shot the music video for the song 7/11 without a production team, and that's right on her balcony.
The music video for Nicki Minaj's Anaconda got a worthy successor - Jennifer Lopez and rapper Iggy Azalea's Booty, while the one from Shakira and Rihanna for the song "Can't Remember to Forget You" seems completely innocent. 2014 will be known as the year of the (big) butt festival.
Can you imagine being invited to a party organized by “Flash Gordon” and “Barbarella”? It would probably look something like Ariana Grande's latest music video - "Brake Free".
Julius Caesar's saying "Divide and rule" has always been relevant, but probably never more so than with the advent of Facebook and Twitter. In a little while, likes and retweets will become currency, because it seems that ruling the Internet and advertising is no longer enough. Chasing them is a modern gladiatorial game, which does not measure the quality of the 'competitor' but his popularity. And there is no better arena than a music video.
Have you ever wondered how many layers, how many different sounds an electronic composition consists of? But what makes these sounds? Wonder no more. In his latest video, the French producer 20syl (Sylvain Richard) stripped the song "Kodama", shattered it into its original parts like an accidentally knocked over porcelain vase, and thus created a wonderful display of the "anatomy" of the melody.
Basement Jaxx duo's new music video continues a string of oddities in their repertoire, as it follows the scientific process of creating a robot that, in the final stage, closely imitates twerking, the sexually seductive dance that Miley Cyrus launched into the stratosphere. Hmmm, maybe it's time for the British duo to spin their own "Where's your head at?"
The video for John Legend's song You & I (Nobody In The World) is a mirror of today's time, when the concept of female beauty rests on stereotypes that dictate that their bodies are susceptible to constant refinement. No wonder, then, that for a woman it is almost a mission impossible to leave the mirror completely satisfied. Backed by emotionally charged lyrics, Legend's product dispels these misconceptions simply but effectively.