I found the song using Google. "be happy song" ..........
1988, Bobby McFerrin:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d-diB65scQU
1988, Bobby McFerrin:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d-diB65scQU
That's the song with the title, but not the song playing on country radio with those lyrics.I found the song using Google. "be happy song" ..........
1988, Bobby McFerrin:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d-diB65scQU
“Anything Goes” by FGL looks like will be their worst charting hit so far. Still another top 10 hit isn’t that shabby.
This guy is a real country guy. You may not like his song, but he's as country as they come, and so is this song.
And country audiences love it. This song will be #1 on Monday, regardless of what you think.
This was a bad call on my part when it spent 2 weeks at #11 and was losing its bullet. Now it looks to be #1 next week.
This one song was not even identifiable as country. Everything about it was wrong except the lyrics and the southern accent of the vocalist and his Auto-tune. The beat was straight Hot AC
It needs to actually sound country first of all. The instrumentals were also pure Hot AC. A Southern accent is possible in any kind of music. So are these lyrics, really.So everything was country except the beat? If something is 75% country, do you throw it out because of the 25%? Because if so, most of the country music of the 1970s should be thrown out. Especially all the Kenny Rogers and Anne Murray stuff.
It needs to actually sound country first of all. The instrumentals were also pure Hot AC.
It happens.When was the last time you heard a banjo on Hot AC?
It happens.
And you don't even know which song I'm referring to.
I wouldn't know. I was talking about a rap song where the guy had a Southern accent and the lyrics seemed to fit a country format, but everything else about the song was Hot AC or CHR. Mumford & Sons, from what I have heard, are folk, and that wouldn't likely be high-tech.That Mumford & Sons hit from a year or so ago, right?