"Take On Me" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by a-ha | ||||
from the album Hunting High and Low | ||||
B-side | "And You Tell Me" | |||
Released | 19 October 1984 (see Release history) | |||
Recorded | 1984–1985 | |||
Studio | RG Jones, London [1] | |||
Genre | ||||
Length |
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Label | Warner Bros. | |||
Songwriter(s) | ||||
Producer(s) | ||||
A-ha singles chronology | ||||
| ||||
Music videos | ||||
"Take On Me" (original version) on YouTube | ||||
"Take On Me" (second version) on YouTube |
"Take On Me" is a song by the Norwegian synth-pop band a-ha. The original version,recorded in 1984 and released in October of that same year,was produced by Tony Mansfield and remixed by John Ratcliff. The 1985 international hit version was produced by Alan Tarney for the group's debut studio album, Hunting High and Low (1985). The recording combines synth-pop with a varied instrumentation,including acoustic guitars,keyboards,and drums.
The original 1984 version "Take On Me" failed to chart in the United Kingdom,as did the second version in the first of its two 1985 releases. The second of those 1985 releases charted in September 1985,reaching number two on the UK Singles Chart in October. In the United States in October 1985,the single topped Billboard's Hot 100,bolstered by the wide exposure on MTV of director Steve Barron's innovative music video featuring the band in a live-action pencil-sketch animation sequence. The video won six awards and was nominated for two others at the 1986 MTV Video Music Awards.
"Take On Me" originated from Pål Waaktaar's and Magne Furuholmen's previous band Bridges,who first composed a number called "Miss Eerie" when they were 15 and 16 years old,but felt too much like a bubblegum ad. [3] [4] [5] Initially the band felt the riff was too pop-oriented for their band,thus the first version of the song was more "punky" in an attempt to offset the riff. [6] The first take of the song was inspired in part by Doors member Ray Manzarek and his "almost mathematical but very melodic,structured way of playing". [7] Waaktaar considered the song too poppy for their intended dark style,but Furuholmen recalled thinking it was "quite catchy". [6]
Soon after,Bridges disbanded. Waaktaar and Furuholmen relocated to London to try their hand in the music industry there,but returned to Norway after six months of disappointment. [3] They were joined by their school friend,singer Morten Harket,who heard the song and said the keyboard riff had the character of a universal hit sound. The three began working on demos,including a new version of the song,which was renamed "Lesson One" before it evolved into "Take On Me". In January 1983,the band returned to London in search of a recording contract. [3] They intended the song to show off Harket's vocal range,which led to his vocals "doing this spiralling thing". [7]
The band moved into an apartment in London and began contacting record companies and publishing houses. After a few meetings with various A&R personnel,they signed with the publishing house Lionheart. A-ha returned to Norway to earn some money;when they returned to London,they left Lionheart out of frustration. [8] They decided to record new demos,and chose the studio of musician and producer John Ratcliff,intending to re-record five songs. The band signed with Ratcliff,who introduced them to manager Terry Slater. With this encouragement,the band managed to complete some songs,including "Take On Me". After a few meetings,Slater signed them with Warner Bros. Records UK. [8]
The band met with producer Tony Mansfield,an expert in the use of the Fairlight CMI,who mixed the demos with electronic instrumentation. The sound was not what A-ha had hoped to achieve,and the album was remixed again. The band rushed to release "Take On Me" as a single in the United Kingdom but the single only charted at 137,the lowest-charted of all A-ha songs. After this,Warner Brothers' main office in the United States decided to invest in the band,and gave them the opportunity to re-record the song. [8]
The instrumentation included a Yamaha DX7 and PPG Wave,with Furuholmen playing the main melody on a Roland Juno-60. A LinnDrum drum machine was used on the second and third releases,with acoustic cymbals and hi-hat overdubbed. Harket sang the lead vocal using a Neumann U 47 microphone as well as a Neve microphone pre-amp and Neve equaliser. [1]
In 2020,former Warner Brothers UK and Reprise executive Andrew Wickham appeared in A-ha's official anniversary documentary A-ha:The Making of Take On Me,to explain how the song's success was due to several parties realising the band's true value. He detailed how the song finally became the worldwide smash hit still widely recognised today. In 1984,he was the international vice-president for Warner Bros Records America,and their A&R man in London. He said,"I got a call from Terry Slater... I couldn't believe my ears (at the band's audition) when I heard Morten Harket sing. I thought,how can somebody who looks like a film star sound like Roy Orbison? I thought,this is unbelievable."
Wickham immediately signed A-ha to Warner Brothers America,after learning several previous attempts had failed to make "Take On Me" a commercial success. The next release was not successful either and featured a very ordinary performance video. He authorised considerable investment in the band:on Slater's recommendation,producer Alan Tarney was commissioned to refine the song. The new recording achieved a cleaner and more soaring sound and a coda section instead of the earlier quick fade-out;the song was soon completed and re-released in the UK,but the record label's office in London gave them little support,and the single flopped for the second time. [8]
Wickham placed the band on high priority and applied a lateral strategy with further investment. Ayeroff's co-worker John Beug suggested they should base the video on a student animated short he had seen,called "Commuter",by Michael Patterson and Candace Reckinger. Director Steve Barron shot and edited the video,where some of the segments were then drawn over by Patterson,while Reckinger did the mattes,creating a revolutionary rotoscope animated music video which took six months in total to make. [9] [10] The single was released in the US one month after the music video,and immediately appeared in the Billboard Hot 100 [8] and was a worldwide smash,reaching No. 1 in numerous countries.
AllMusic journalist Tim DiGravina described "Take On Me" as "a new wave classic laced with rushing keyboards,made emotionally resonant thanks to Morten Harket's touching vocal delicacy." [2]
"Take On Me" is a synth-pop song that includes acoustic and electric guitars and keyboards, [11] [12] written at a tempo of 169 beats per minute. [13] The lyrics are a plea for love [14] and constructed in a verse–chorus form with a bridge before the final chorus. The song is written in the key of A major with a chord progression of Bm7–E–A–D–E in the verse, A–C♯m7/G♯–F♯m–D in the chorus, and C♯m–G–C♯m–G–Bm–E in the bridge. Harket demonstrates a vocal range of over two and a half octaves. [13] He sings the lowest pitch in the song, A2 (the tonic), at the beginning of the chorus, on the first syllable of the phrase "Take On Me". [13] As the chorus progresses, Harket's voice hits ever higher notes, reaching a falsetto [11] [15] [16] and hitting the song's highest note, E5, (the dominant) at the end. [13] Rolling Stone has thus noted the song as "having one of the hardest-to-sing choruses in pop history". [7] A mix of a drum machine, the LinnDrum, [17] [18] acoustic guitars, and electronic instrumentation serves as the song's backing track. [11]
The first release of "Take On Me" in 1984 includes a completely different recording; this mix was featured in the first video, which shows the band singing with a blue background.
The second video, directed by film director Steve Barron, is the far more widely recognised video for the song. It was filmed in 1985 at Kim's Cafe (now called Turkish Chef Mediterranean Restaurant) (corner of Wandsworth Road and Pensbury Place, London SW8), and on a sound stage in London. [19] The video used a pencil-sketch animation and live-action combination called rotoscoping, in which the live-action footage is traced using a frame-by-frame process to give the characters realistic movements. [20] [21] Approximately 3,000 frames were rotoscoped, which took 16 weeks to complete. [22] [23] The idea of the video was suggested by Warner Bros. executive Jeff Ayeroff, who was pivotal in making "Take on Me" a globally recognised music hit. [24]
The music video was remastered to 2160p (4K) in 2019 from the original 35mm film and released on YouTube, while retaining its original URL and upload date of 6 January 2010. The remaster also contains new sound effects (revving motorbikes etc.) not featured on the original clip. [25] On 17 February 2020, the music video reached one billion views on YouTube. Prior to that date, only four songs from the 20th century had reached that mark ("November Rain" and "Sweet Child o' Mine" by Guns N' Roses, "Smells Like Teen Spirit" by Nirvana, and "Bohemian Rhapsody" by Queen)—making "Take On Me" the fifth video from that time period to do so, and the first Scandinavian act to achieve this. [26] [27] [28] By September 2024, the music video had received 2 billion views on YouTube. [29]
A-ha also performed Take On Me at the Live 8 in Berlin at Siegessäule on 2 July 2005.
The video's main theme is a romantic fantasy narrative. [30] It begins with a montage of pencil drawings in a comic-book style representing motorcycle sidecar racing, in which the hero (Morten Harket) is pursued by two opponents (Philip Jackson and Alfie Curtis). It then cuts to a scene in a cafe, in which a young woman (Bunty Bailey) is reading the comic book. As the woman reads, the waitress brings her coffee and the bill. The comic's hero, after winning the race, seemingly winks at the woman from the page. His pencil-drawn hand suddenly reaches out of the comic book, inviting the woman into it. Once inside, she, too, appears in the pencil-drawn form as he sings to her and introduces her to his black-and-white world which features a sort of looking-glass portal where people and objects look real on one side and pencil-drawn on the other.
Back in the cafe, the waitress returns to find the woman missing. Believing the customer left without paying the bill, she angrily crumples the comic book and throws it into a bin. This causes the hero's two opposing racers to reappear as villains, one of them armed with a large pipe wrench. The racers smash the looking glass with the pipe wrench, trapping the woman in the comic book. The hero punches one of the thugs aside and retreats with the woman into a maze of paper. Arriving at a dead end, he tears a hole in the paper wall so that the woman can escape as the menacing opposing racers close in on him and they raise their pipe wrench to his face while he pulls out a pipe wrench of his own. The woman, now back in the real world and found lying beside the trash bin to the surprise of cafe guests and staff, retrieves the comic from the bin and runs home where she attempts to smooth out the creases of the crumpled pages in order to read what happens next.
The next panel shows the hero, lying seemingly lifeless, and the woman begins to cry. However, he then wakes up and tries to break out of his comic-book frames. At the same time, his image appears in the woman's hallway, seemingly torn between real and comic form, hurling himself repeatedly left-and-right against the walls, eventually falling to the floor in his attempts to shatter his two-dimensional barrier. (This scene is largely patterned after a climactic scene in the 1980 film Altered States . [19] ) He escapes from the comic book by becoming human, and as he stands up he breaks into a smile. The woman also smiles as she rushes towards him.
The story is concluded in the opening of "The Sun Always Shines on T.V." music video. [31]
At the 1986 MTV Video Music Awards, the video for "Take On Me" won six awards—Best New Artist in a Video, Best Concept Video, Most Experimental Video, Best Direction in a Video, Best Special Effects in a Video, and Viewer's Choice—and was nominated for two others, Best Group Video and Video of the Year. [32] It was also nominated for Favorite Pop/Rock Video at the 13th American Music Awards in 1986. [33]
The second music video was produced by Limelight Productions. [22] The crew of the video were director Steve Barron, [22] producer Simon Fields, [22] cinematographer Oliver Stapleton, [34] editor Richard Simpson from Rushes Film Editing, [35] and animators Michael Patterson and Candace Reckinger. [35]
The music video and song have often been referred to in cover versions, films, TV programmes and video games. The Family Guy episode "Breaking Out Is Hard to Do" includes a licensed, re-edited version of the video. [36] Volkswagen created a television advertisement inspired by the video. [37] The video was also one of the first to be made into a so-called literal music video. [38] The visuals of the video were used as an homage for Paramore's music video for "Caught in the Middle". [39]
In 2021, Rolling Stone listed "Take On Me" at number 14 on their list of the 100 greatest music videos. [40] To celebrate 65 years of the Hot 100, in 2023 Billboard staff ranked the 500 Best Pop Songs that graced the chart since 1958, placing the song at number 26. [41]
"Take On Me" was originally released in 1984, mixed by Tony Mansfield, but failed to make an impact in the United Kingdom. [8] This release peaked at no. 3 in Norway [42] but failed to reach audiences abroad. [8] [43] [44] The group re-recorded the song with the help of producer Alan Tarney, [8] [19] releasing the new version in 1985.
In the United States, Warner Bros. invested in the revolutionary second video for "Take On Me", which used Tarney's version of the song. The new video was released to dance clubs and television a month before the record was available in stores or played on the radio. [45] Wide exposure on MTV [43] helped propel the single to the top of Billboard's Hot 100, reaching number one in the issue dated 19 October 1985 (its fifteenth week on the chart). [46] It remained on the chart for twenty-seven weeks, [47] and ranked ten in the 1985 year-end chart. [48] As of June 2014, the song has sold 1,463,000 digital copies in the US after it became available for download in the digital era. [49]
"Take On Me" was released for the third time in the United Kingdom in September 1985. [43] The record debuted on the UK Singles Chart at number 55 and in late October reached number 2, where it remained for three consecutive weeks, held off the top spot by Britain's biggest single of the year, Jennifer Rush's "The Power of Love". On 14 August 2020 it was certified gold by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI). [50]
In Norway, A-ha's native country, "Take On Me" re-entered the VG-lista singles chart, reaching number one a year after it was first released. [51] The single was largely successful elsewhere, reaching the top of the Eurochart Hot 100 for nine weeks, topping the singles charts in 26 countries,[ citation needed ] including Austria, Belgium, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Sweden, and Switzerland, [52] [53] [54] [55] [56] and reaching the top three in France and number two in Ireland. [57] [58]
Region | Date | B-side | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
Norway | 19 October 1984 (original version) | "And You Tell Me" | [59] |
United Kingdom | 5 April 1985 | "Love Is Reason" | [60] |
United States | 17 June 1985 | [61] | |
United Kingdom | 16 September 1985 (re-release) | [62] |
7-inch: MCA / MCA-9146 United Kingdom (1984)
12-inch: MCA / MCA-9146T United Kingdom (1984)
7-inch: MCA / MCA-9006 United Kingdom (1985)
12-inch: MCA / MCA-9006T United Kingdom (1985)
7-inch: MCA. / MCA-29011 United States (1985)
12-inch: Warner Bros. / PRO-A-2291 (Promo) United States (1985)
Credits adapted from Sound on Sound. [1]
Weekly charts
| Year-end charts
|
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
Belgium (BEA) [93] | Gold | 100,000 [93] |
Brazil (Pro-Música Brasil) [94] | Platinum | 60,000‡ |
Denmark (IFPI Danmark) [95] | 2× Platinum | 180,000‡ |
France (SNEP) [93] | Gold | 500,000* |
Germany (BVMI) [96] | Gold | 500,000^ |
Italy (FIMI) [93] 1985–1986 sales | Gold | 300,000 [93] |
Italy (FIMI) [97] since 2009 sales | 2× Platinum | 200,000‡ |
Japan (RIAJ) [98] | Gold | 100,000* |
Portugal (AFP) [99] | 4× Platinum | 40,000‡ |
Spain (PROMUSICAE) [100] | 3× Platinum | 180,000‡ |
United Kingdom (BPI) [101] Physical | Gold | 500,000^ |
United Kingdom (BPI) [50] Digital | 4× Platinum | 2,400,000‡ |
United States Digital | — | 1,463,000 [49] |
* Sales figures based on certification alone. |
In 2017, A-ha appeared on the television series MTV Unplugged and played and recorded acoustic versions of many of their popular songs for the album MTV Unplugged – Summer Solstice in Giske, Norway, including "Take On Me". [102]
"Take On Me" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by Reel Big Fish | ||||
from the album BASEketball and Why Do They Rock So Hard? | ||||
Released | 1998 | |||
Recorded | 1998 | |||
Genre | Ska punk | |||
Length | 3:14 | |||
Label | Mojo | |||
Songwriter(s) |
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Reel Big Fish singles chronology | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"Take On Me" on YouTube |
In 1998, ska punk band Reel Big Fish covered "Take On Me" for the film BASEketball . The song was later released on the BASEketball soundtrack and the international version of their album Why Do They Rock So Hard? [103] [104] The band also performs the song at concerts. [105] Reel Big Fish released a video clip for "Take On Me", directed by Jeff Moore, [106] and features the band playing the song while walking down an aisle in the stadium, and playing a game of BASEketball interlaced with clips from the film. An alternative video for the song's international release that contained only the stadium aisle footage was also released. Reel Big Fish also included a live version of the song in their live album Our Live Album Is Better than Your Live Album and live DVD's You're All in This Together and Reel Big Fish Live! In Concert! [107]
"Take On Me" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by A1 | ||||
from the album The A List | ||||
B-side | "I Got Sunshine" | |||
Released | 28 August 2000 | |||
Length | 3:46 | |||
Label | Columbia | |||
Songwriter(s) |
| |||
A1 singles chronology | ||||
| ||||
Music video | ||||
"Take On Me" on YouTube |
On 28 August 2000, [108] British-Norwegian boy band A1 released a cover of "Take On Me" for their second studio album, The A List . [109] Despite being panned by music critics, who called it a "lame cover version" [110] and a "note for note copy" that seems like "a re-release of the original"; [111] it was commercially successful, topping the charts in the United Kingdom and Norway. [112] [113]
The music video was directed by Stuart Gosling. It features A1 entering a computer world by putting on virtual reality glasses after finding out about a deadly computer virus. After flying for a distance, they find the virus and destroy it, saving humanity. [114] The video was inspired by the 1982 live-action science fiction film Tron . [115]
Weekly charts
| Year-end charts
|
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
Norway (IFPI Norway) [132] | Gold | |
United Kingdom (BPI) [133] | Silver | 200,000^ |
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. |
On 27 August 2015, fellow Norwegian musician Kygo released a remixed version via iTunes to help promote the rollout of the Apple Music streaming service. His version foregoes the iconic keyboard riffs and instead features a new one. [134] The style of his version has been described as tropical house. [135] As of April 2021, the song has amassed more than 15 million listens on YouTube and 36 million listens on Spotify. The remix preserves Harket's original vocals (albeit with processing effects and a different arrangement).
In the 2015 video game Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain, a cassette of Take On Me can be obtained as a secret collectible.
A version of this song was performed on the series finale, "Chuck vs. The Goodbye", of the television show Chuck which aired on 27 January 2012. The song was performed by Scott Krinsky and Vik Sahay of "Jeffster" – a fictional band consisting of their characters Jeffrey Barnes ("Jeff-", for Jeffrey), portrayed by Krinsky, and Lester Patel ("-ster", for Lester), portrayed by Sahay.
A cover by D. A. Wallach was featured in the film La La Land . Wallach makes an appearance as the lead singer of a 1980s pop cover band that features Sebastian Wilder, one of the film's two protagonists. [136] The cover was released as part of the album La La Land: The Complete Musical Experience . [137]
American rock band Weezer included a cover version of the song in their 2019 covers compilation The Teal Album . An accompanying music video was released on 12 February 2019, in which rock band Calpurnia—led by frontman Finn Wolfhard ("Mike" in the Netflix original series Stranger Things ) who also plays a younger version of Weezer's own frontman, Rivers Cuomo—performs the cover. The video, set in 1985 in the "Cuomo Residence", shows Wolfhard (as Cuomo) and the rest of Calpurnia, lip-syncing to the song while "rehearsing" it in the residence's living room; the video features camera work that pays homage to the original video by a-ha. [138] Near the end of the video, Wolfhard is shown sitting at a desk in his bedroom, scribbling possible names for his new band on a page of a notebook (the name Weezer is shown as option No.3). He then turns the page to draw what would become Weezer's band logo. The video also features some scenes of Calpurnia playing, filmed with the rotoscoping technique that made the original a-ha video famous. [139] The cover version, set a semitone lower than the original version (i.e. A-flat major), was also used in the closing scene of The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run , wherein Bikini Bottom was turned into a "sea snail refuge".
On 11 October 2019, the Dutch DJs Lucas & Steve released "Perfect", a single that greatly adopts on the music of "Take On Me". The single features on the vocals of the Dutch X Factor fifth season winner Haris Alagic known by the mononym Haris. Released on Spinnin' Records in the EDM and deephouse style, it was accompanied by an official music video. [140] The song was greatly successful on the Dutch Singles Chart as well as on the Polish Airplay Chart and also appeared on the Tipparade of the Belgian charts. There was a successful "Perfect (LUM!X Remix)" released.
The song "Feel This Moment", performed by American rapper Pitbull featuring American singer Christina Aguilera, samples the instrumental riff of "Take On Me". [141]
The debut single of K-pop boygroup Zerobaseone, "In Bloom", samples "Take On Me". [142]
Upon release, the song Blinding Lights by the Weeknd was frequently compared to "Take On Me" [143] including by both The Weeknd [144] and Morton Harket himself [145] though the song contains no direct samples or cover elements.
A-ha is a Norwegian synth-pop band formed in Oslo in 1982. Founded by Paul Waaktaar-Savoy, Magne Furuholmen, and Morten Harket, the band rose to fame during the mid-1980s.
Stay on These Roads is the third studio album by Norwegian band A-ha, released on 3 May 1988 by Warner Bros. Records. Six singles were released from the album.
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"Close to Me" is a song by English rock band the Cure, released in September 1985 as the second and final single from their sixth album, The Head on the Door.
"The Sun Always Shines on T.V." is a song by Norwegian synth-pop band a-ha, released as the third single from their debut studio album, Hunting High and Low (1985). The song was written by guitarist Pål Waaktaar. In some commercial markets the single was not as popular as their previous (debut) single "Take On Me", which had reached the top spot in the United States and several other countries around the world, but in the United Kingdom and Ireland it improved upon the number-two charting of "Take On Me", reaching number one on the UK Singles Chart for two weeks in January 1986, having been released there on 16 December 1985. Its success secured for the band the prestige of having number-one single status on both primary Anglo-American popular music charts on either side of the Atlantic.
The discography of A-ha, a Norwegian synthpop/rock band, consists of eleven studio albums, eight compilation albums, six box sets, ten extended plays, and fifty singles. This list does not include solo material or other projects recorded by A-ha band members.
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"The Blood That Moves the Body" is a song by Norwegian band A-ha, released on 6 June 1988 by Warner Bros. Records as the second single from the band's third studio album, Stay on These Roads (1988). The song was written by bandmember Pål Waaktaar and produced by Alan Tarney. It peaked at number one in Iceland, and was a top 20 hit in Belgium, Ireland, Italy and South Africa. The music video was directed by Andy Morahan and filmed in Austria and France. On 30 March 1992, the song was re-released with the remixes by Alan Tarney. The video remained unchanged. The dark, enigmatic lyrics of this song have been attributed to many things, including teen suicides in Japan and literary references to Eyes of a Blue Dog. The "Two-Time Gun Remix" was later included on A-ha's 2010 compilation album, 25, which features all of the band's hits, across two CDs.
Tarney/Spencer Band were a rock band formed in London in 1975 with Trevor Spencer on drums and Alan Tarney on lead guitar, bass guitar and lead vocals. Both had been in Australian bands, including James Taylor Move, prior to relocating to the United Kingdom, where they formed the duo. The group issued three albums, Tarney and Spencer (1976), Three's a Crowd (1978) and Run for Your Life (1979). Their single, "No Time to Lose" (1979), received airplay in the United States on album-oriented rock radio stations. It charted on the Billboard Hot 100 in both 1979 and again in 1981 upon re-issue. By the end of 1979, Tarney/Spencer Band had broken up and both founders undertook careers as songwriters, session musicians and record producers.
"Train of Thought" is a song by the Norwegian synth-pop band a-ha, released in March 1986 as the fourth single from their debut studio album, Hunting High and Low (1985). The lyrics for this song were based on the existentialist authors and poets Gunvor Hofmo, Knut Hamsun and Fyodor Dostoevsky – Pål's favourites at the time.
"Hunting High and Low" is a song by Norwegian band a-ha, released in June 1986 as the fifth and final single from the band's debut studio album of the same name (1985). It became the third most successful single from Hunting High and Low on the charts and one of the band's most recognizable and popular songs. The song did not chart in the United States, but reached the top five in the United Kingdom and Ireland.
"The Living Daylights" is the theme song from the 1987 James Bond film of the same name, performed by Norwegian synth-pop band a-ha. It was written by guitarist Pål Waaktaar. A revised version of the song was included on the band's third studio album, Stay on These Roads (1988).
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"Feel This Moment" is a song by American rapper Pitbull featuring American singer Christina Aguilera. The song was released on February 21, 2013, by Mr. 305, Polo Grounds Music and RCA Records, as the fourth single from the album Global Warming, which was released in 2012. It is a dance-pop number that talks about stopping to take a moment to appreciate life. "Feel This Moment" was written by the artists alongside Chantal Kreviazuk and producers Nasri Atweh, Adam Messinger, Sir Nolan, and DJ Buddha. The song interpolates "Take On Me" by a-ha, written and composed by Morten Harket, Paul Waaktaar-Savoy, and Magne Furuholmen.
Morten Harket is a Norwegian singer who is the lead vocalist of the synth-pop band A-ha.
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