“Hey Boy Hey Girl” is a song by English big beat duo The Chemical Brothers. It was released as a single from their 1999 album Surrender. The vocal sample “Hey girls, B-boys, superstar DJs, here we go!” was taken from “The Roof is on Fire” by Rock Master Scott & the Dynamic Three. It peaked at number 3 in the UK Singles Chart and remained in the chart for ten weeks.
Category: 90’s
Air – Kelly Watch The Stars
Moon Safari is the debut full-length studio album by French electronic music duo Air, released in 1998. On 14 April 2008 Virgin Records re-released Moon Safari to mark the album’s tenth anniversary. The limited edition album came with a bound book, a DVD documentary about the duo and an extra CD with live performances and remixes.
Lenny Kravitz – American Woman
Lenny Kravitz covered “American Woman” for the soundtrack of Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me. Kravitz did a slower and softer version, without the signature guitar solo; he later said to Randy Bachman that the reason why he skipped the guitar part was “I couldn’t get the sound. I couldn’t get the tone.” It was later included in the 1999 re-issue of his 5 album. The music video featured actress Heather Graham (who starred in The Spy Who Shagged Me); the original political themes of the song were largely replaced by sex appeal.
CΓ©line Dion – It’s All Coming Back To Me Now
The song is the first on Dion’s album Falling into You. Steinman produced the track, with Steven Rinkoff and Roy Bittan as co-producers. Bat out of Hell and Meat Loaf collaborators Todd Rundgren, Eric Troyer, Rory Dodd, Glen Burtnick and Kasim Sulton provided backing vocals. An edited version of the song was then released on Celine’s album Celine Dion All The Way… A Decade Of Song. On Celine’s Falling Into You album the song’s original length is seven minutes and thirty-seven seconds while on her All The Way album it is only five minutes and thirty-one seconds
Richard Marx – Right Here Waiting
“Now and Forever” is a 1994 song (see 1994 in music) written, produced and performed by American rock singer-songwriter Richard Marx. The song was also used in 1994 film The Getaway starring Kim Basinger and Alec Baldwin and directed by Roger Donaldson.