Addicted to Bass

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Addicted_to_Bass an entity of type: Thing

"Addicted to Bass" is a song by Josh Abrahams (Puretone) and Amiel Daemion, featuring Daemion on vocals. It reached the top 20 in the Australian charts in 1998. It originally appeared on Abrahams' 1998 album, Sweet Distorted Holiday, and was included on the 2002 album Stuck in a Groove—credited to Abrahams' alias Puretone. The original release reached number 15 in Australia and number 27 in New Zealand while a 2002 remix by Apollo 440 reached number two on the UK Singles Chart and number one on the US Dance Club Songs charts. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Addicted to Bass
rdf:langString Addicted to Bass
rdf:langString Addicted to Bass
xsd:integer 2461736
xsd:integer 1100953764
xsd:date 2016-11-26
xsd:date 2020-05-08
rdf:langString Josh Abrahams and Amiel Daemion
rdf:langString Puretone
rdf:langString Gold
rdf:langString Silver
xsd:integer 1998 2002
rdf:langString Addicted to Bass.jpg
xsd:integer 307
rdf:langString * Prozaac * Festival Mushroom * Gusto
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rdf:langString Headroom
xsd:integer 1999
rdf:langString Thrill Seeker
xsd:integer 1998
rdf:langString Josh Abrahams
rdf:langString "Certification"
rdf:langString Australia
rdf:langString United Kingdom
xsd:date 1998-10-05
xsd:integer 1998 2002
rdf:langString Addicted to Bass
rdf:langString single
rdf:langString * Josh Abrahams * Amiel Daemion
rdf:langString "Addicted to Bass" is a song by Josh Abrahams (Puretone) and Amiel Daemion, featuring Daemion on vocals. It reached the top 20 in the Australian charts in 1998. It originally appeared on Abrahams' 1998 album, Sweet Distorted Holiday, and was included on the 2002 album Stuck in a Groove—credited to Abrahams' alias Puretone. The original release reached number 15 in Australia and number 27 in New Zealand while a 2002 remix by Apollo 440 reached number two on the UK Singles Chart and number one on the US Dance Club Songs charts. In 2015, the song was listed at number 14 in In the Mix's '100 Greatest Australian Dance Tracks of All Time' with Nick Jarvis saying "With its memorable, sing-along vocals, nudge-wink drug references and – best of all – that monstrous pre-dubstep bassline paired with scattershot jungle breakbeats, it was a perfect fusion of radio-friendly pop smarts and club madness".
<minute> 3.9
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 17770
xsd:date 1998-10-05
xsd:double 234.0

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