Enjoy the Magic in the Air with this MP3 Song Download - The Fantastic Song by Magic System and Chawki
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"24K Magic" is a song by American singer Bruno Mars from his studio album of the same name (2016). Atlantic Records released it as the album's lead single on October 7, 2016, for digital download and streaming. Atlantic provided it as an instant grat track for those who pre-ordered the album. Mars, Philip Lawrence and Christopher Brody Brown wrote the single. Calling themselves Shampoo Press & Curl the three of them handled production, with additional production by the Stereotypes. The song has been described as a funk, disco and contemporary R&B track, heavily influenced by hip hop. The A.V. Club noticed the synthesizer riff and backbeat resembled the one in "The Message" (1982) by Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five. The song's lyrics address extravagance, glamour, and the party lifestyle.
"24K Magic" was generally well received by music critics. Some of them complimented Mars's vocals and compared them to James Brown, describing the song as engaging, fun and evoking feelings of nostalgia. Others criticized it for not being innovative as it tried to emulate "Uptown Funk" (2014). The song was a commercial success. It peaked at number four in the United States and number three in Canada and Australia. It has been certified five times platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and by the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA). It was certified six times platinum by Music Canada (MC). The single reached number one in New Zealand, France, Belgium (Flanders) and Argentina. It has received a diamond certification in France and a platinum one in New Zealand. In the United Kingdom and Spain, the song peaked at number five, being certified two times platinum by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) and by Productores de Música de España (PROMUSICAE).
In September 2014, Bruno Mars tweeted "Now it's time to start writing chapter 3", hinting he was working on new music. Following the release of the successful Mark Ronson and Mars's single "Uptown Funk" (2014), the latter headed to the studio to record more songs. Mars said he had no plans to release a new album "[u]ntil it's done". It was due in March, but his appearance at the Super Bowl halftime show postponed it for several months. At the time, seven songs were already recorded.[1] On October 3, 2016, Mars revealed the song title and release date through his Instagram account after he uploaded nine photos. They showed the singer looking down wearing a white hat with "XXIV k" inscribed on it. Mars wrote, "You can call it my first single, but I call it the invitation to the party".[2]
The Stereotypes had known Mars and worked with him since 2007, however, after the singer signed a deal with Atlantic Records they did not collaborate very often.[3] Nevertheless, in 2015 Jonathan Yip talked with Mars about working together. Since the singer was already recording 24K Magic, Mars asked for "some beats" and Yip sent them. Later, he asked for more beats and the Stereotypes sent them, but they never heard from him, "nothing came of it".[4][5] In June 2016, Yip touched base with Mars. He asked Yip if they would like to help him finish a song for his album, to add a little "seasoning". He needed another song with a certain tempo and key.[4][5][6] Yip sent Mars an idea that caught his attention, and he asked the Stereotypes to come to the studio.[3][4][7]
In an interview with NME, Mars said he wrote "24K Magic" when "Uptown Funk" (2014) was "number one", so the songs share the same "spirit".[10] In another interview with Zane Lowe for Beats 1, Mars explained that the album was going to be a movie and the lead single was its opening. He wanted the song "to get the party started". To achieve that it needed to sound genuine and that he was having a good time, so he used his emotions and feelings to guide him. He also admitted that "24K Magic' was influenced by West Coast hip hop artists like "Dr. Dre, DJ Quik, Suga Free ... [they represented] a time when it was okay to party, to be flashy, to get on the dance floor".[11][12] In November 2017, Mars was a guest on the Charlie Rose Show sharing that the song was the vision he had intended for this album "I saw us having fun on stage. I saw us draped in silk and gold and me and my friends going up on stage and having the best time. It was important that we had the content to do so".[13]
Mars, Philip Lawrence and Christopher Brody Brown wrote "24K Magic". They handled the production under the name Shampoo Press & Curl with additional production by the Stereotypes. Mars, Lawrence, Brown and James Fauntleroy provided the background vocals. Dave Foreman played the guitar, while Byron "Mr. Talkbox" Chambers and Mars provided the vocals on the talk box. Charles Moniz, with engineering assistant Jacob Dennis, engineered and recorded the song at Glenwood Place Studios in Burbank. Serban Ghenea mixed "24K Magic" at MixStar Studios in Virginia Beach, with John Hanes serving as the mix engineer. It was mastered by Tom Coyne at Sterling Sound, NYC.[14]
"24K Magic" premiered on October 7, 2016, at midnight on radio station WBMX.[15] Atlantic Records released the single on the same day for digital download and streaming.[16] The album was made available for pre-order worldwide via Mars's official site, with the song as an instant download.[17] Warner Music Group also issued the track for radio airplay in Italy on the same date.[18] BBC Radio 1 began adding the song onto their playlists on October 8, 2016.[19] Subsequently, the song was released to US contemporary hit radio stations on October 11, 2016.[20] On May 26, 2017, Atlantic Records made a remix version by Dutch DJ R3hab available for digital download and streaming.[21]
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"24K Magic" is a funk, disco and R&B song,[22][23][24] heavily influenced by hip hop.[25][26][27] It is composed in the key of F minor at a tempo of 94 beats per minute.[28] The song begins with a talk box intro, performed by Byron "Mr. Talk Box" Chambers and Mars.[14] Initially, reviewers thought the vocals on the intro had Auto-Tune, a vocoder or synthetic vocals.[29][30][31] Eventually, they concluded that it was a talk box, developed by Roger Troutman and Zapp, which heavily influenced the single.[27][30][32] Forbes and Entertainment Weekly's music critics noticed the resemblance between the "robotic-sound" intro on "24K Magic" and Tupac Shakur's "California Love" (1995).[25][33] The song features several layers of funk synthesizers in its instrumentation, which drew comparisons to Prince.[27][32][34] It also features bass lines similar to The Gap Band's style. Its structure borrows from "Uptown Funk" as Mars raps while singing the track with a "call and response" composition.[35][36] The bridge features a record scratching, while the backing vocals of Mars, Lawrence, Brown and Fauntleroy make heavy use of a vocoder.[35][36] The synthesizer riff and backbeat of "24K Magic" has been interpreted by The A.V. Club as having a resemblance to the one in "The Message" (1982) by Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five.[37] Critics found the sound to be closer to that of the 1980s electronica, hip hop and R&B, than the 1970s style of "Uptown Funk".[35][38]
The track reaches its "ebullient" and "infectious" chorus where Mars sings, "Put your pinky rings up to the moon, What y'all tryna do? 24K magic in the air".[33][34] All the verses are designed with a "call-and-response hook".[36] In the opening lyrics, Mars shouts, "Guess who's back again!/Oh, they don't know? I bet they know soon as we walk in", punctuating the verses, he continues with more confidence "I'm a dangerous man with some money in my pocket", while backed up by a chorus "adding tough-guy punch to his mellifluous" shouts.[27][32][36] The exhortations and confidence in his vocals reminded critics of James Brown.[27][39] The lyrics celebrate extravagances, glamour and the party lifestyle.[37][40] Many reviewers felt "24K Magic" condensed a playlist's worth 80's electro-R&B into one song, with a modern twist on its lyrics.[25][27][30]
The song was listed by several publications as being among the best songs of the year. Entertainment Weekly's Ray Rahman dubbed the song a "bulletproof party jam", ranking it number 35 on the list of 100 songs.[42] On the list of the 101 best songs of 2016 compiled by Spin, the publication ranked the song at number 61 and Winston Cook-Wilson said that Mars emulated the style he listened to while growing up and was nothing but impressive.[43] On the Billboard 100 Best Pop Songs of 2016: Critics' Picks list, the single was placed at number 64. Taylor Weatherby wrote that Mars was able to "create another bonafide hip-shaker" like "Uptown Funk" thanks to "24K Magic"'s "infectious beat and James Brown-worthy vocal exhortations".[39] The Village Voice's annual year-end Pazz & Jop critics' poll selected it as the 48th best song of 2016, tied with Childish Gambino's "Redbone" and Beyoncé's "All Night".[44] In 2017, "24K Magic" received a nomination for International Hit of the Year at the 2017 Danish GAFFA Awards.[45] It was nominated by the 48th NAACP Image Awards for Outstanding Song, Contemporary.[46] In the same year, "24K Magic" won Top 40 Single of the Year at the New Music Awards.[47]
In the same year, at the 30th Annual Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards the track received a nomination for Favorite Song,[48] and a nomination for International Hit of the Year at the MTV Millennial Awards.[49] At the 2017 Radio Disney Music Awards, the single won the award for Best Song That Makes You Smile.[50] "24K Magic" received the accolade for Top 10 Gold International Gold Songs at the RTHK International Pop Poll.[51] In the same year, it was nominated for Best R&B Song at the 2017 Billboard Music Awards.[52] The song was nominated for Choice Music: Pop Song at the 2017 Teen Choice Awards, but lost.[53] In 2018, "24K Magic" won Record of The Year at the 60th Annual Grammy Awards ceremony.[54] That same year, it lost the award for International Work of the Year at the APRA Music Awards.[55] The song won an award for excellence in Record Production/Single or Track at the 2018 TEC Awards.[56] Mediabase, in their year-end list of 2017, had "24K Magic" as the third most played song at Urban AC stations.[57] In 2017, the track was one of the winners of Most Performed Songs at the ASCAP Pop Music Awards.[58] In the following year, at the same award ceremony, it won, again, Most Performed Songs, and from the Rhythm & Soul Music Awards was one of the Winning R&B/Hip-Hop Songs.[59][60]