Fantastic Best Music Video clips

7/07/2016

Cyndi Lauper - Time After Time (Video clip)


"Time After Time" is a melody by American vocalist musician Cyndi Lauper. It was recorded by Lauper for her presentation studio collection, She's So Unusual (1983), with Rob Hyman (co-author
 

and establishing individual from the stone band The Hooters) contributing sponsorship vocals. The track was created by Rick Chertoff and discharged as a solitary on January 27, 1984. It was the second single to be discharged from the collection and turned into Lauper's first #1 hit in the U.S. The tune was composed in the collection's last stages, after "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun", "She Bop" and "All Through the Night" had been composed. The written work started with the title, which Lauper had found in TV Guide magazine, alluding to the 1979 sci-fi film Time After Time.

"Time After Time" is made out of basic console synth harmonies, splendid, jangly guitars, clock-ticking percussion, and versatile bassline, and melodiously is an affection tune of dedication. Most music faultfinders gave the melody positive audits, with most praising the tune for being a strong and significant affection tune, and in addition considering the track Lauper's best tune. The melody has been chosen as one of the Best Love Songs of All Time by numerous media outlets, including Rolling Stone, Nerve, MTV and numerous others. "Time After Time" was additionally assigned for a Grammy Award for Song of the Year at the 1985 release. The tune was a win on the outlines, turning into her first number-one single on the U.S. Bulletin Hot 100 outline on June 9, 1984 and staying there for two weeks. Around the world, the tune is her most monetarily fruitful single, after "Girls Just Want to Have Fun", and achieved number three on the UK Singles Chart and number six on the ARIA Singles Chart. The melody is additionally known for its various spreads by an extensive variety of craftsmen, including Miles Davis, who recorded an instrumental form for his 1985 collection, You're Under Arrest, and Eva Cassidy, whose front of the tune shows up on her after death collection of the same name. R&B vocalist Lil Mo likewise secured the tune for her 2001 introduction collection Based on a True Story. An acoustic variant was sung by Lauper with Sarah McLachlan on her 2005 collection, The Body Acoustic. Lauper has played out the melody live with Patti LaBelle twice in 1985 and 2004 and with Sarah McLachlan at the American Music Awards of 2005, and in addition with rapper Lil' Kim in 2009. The melody has been highlighted various times in mainstream culture including the movies Napoleon Dynamite, View From the Top, Strictly Ballroom, Up In the Air, John Tucker Must Die, Prom Night, Clockstoppers, Ghosts of Girlfriends Past, Sunny, Paranoia, Good Deeds, Nebraska, Irresistible, This Is Where I Leave You, Brown Sugar, and Romy and Michelle's High School Reunion and also the TV programs Cold Case, Stars in Their Eyes, Smallville, Veronica Mars, The Simpsons, The New Adventures of Old Christine, Ugly Betty, EastEnders, Accused, Parks and Recreation, Atop the Fourth Wall, Psych, Defiance, Gray's Anatomy, Glee and My Name is Earl.

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