The classic video from the Norwegian trio A-ha officially passed the one billion views mark on YouTube on Monday Nicholas Rice is a Senior Editor for PEOPLE Magazine. He began working with the brand ...
Norwegian synthpop trio A-ha’s “Take On Me” has joined YouTube‘s billion-views club. The iconic video from A-ha, which combines live action with pencil-sketch animation, is only the second song from ...
The makers of the Last of Us 2 video game were hunting high and low for the perfect song. They’d commenced work on an emotive cut scene in the survival horror adventure in which vengeance-bound hero ...
In 1985, two groundbreaking works of animation could be viewed, sometimes in the same hour, on MTV. One was “Take On Me,” the A-ha video in which a woman (actress Bunty Bailey) gets yanked out of a ...
“You write a song in your youth and you don’t write for a particular group of people one way or another; you write it for everyone. But then stuff like this happens,” Furuholmen tells Rolling Stone.
Hilary Remley is a News Writer at Collider. She is a recent graduate of SUNY Albany. Get ready to douse yourself in another round of 1980s nostalgia, because A-Ha: The Movie is coming to theaters next ...
Norwegian pop trio a-ha became a one hit wonder thanks to ‘Take on Me,’ which hit No. 1 in 1985. There was another 'Take on Me' video shot a year earlier that featured the band singing in front of a ...
A-ha has unveiled a 4k restoration of their revolutionary rotoscoped video for their Eighties smash “Take on Me.” A-ha famously released two versions of “Take on Me” and two videos for the song. The ...
The rotoscoped video for A-ha’s “Take on Me” came out in 1985. Thirty-six years, countless pastiches, and 1.3 billion Youtube views later, we finally have an ...
The song was recorded in two versions and went through three releases, and the video was done twice, but A-ha’s classic 1985 music video for Take On Me has now passed the one billion views mark on ...
On Wednesday, A-ha's "Take On Me" became the second music video from the '80s to pass one billion views on YouTube, after Guns N' Roses' "Sweet Child O'Mine." In a tweet, the band thanked their fans ...