Who sings done song?

Who sings done song?

Chris Janson
Done/Artists

Who sang virtual reality?

Jamiroquai
Virtual Insanity/Artists

Who sings the song I Still Believe?

Jeremy Camp
I Still Believe/Artists

Who is the woman in Chris Janson video?

Kelly Lynn
Country music star Chris Janson’s wife Kelly Lynn has been a big part of the singer-songwriter’s career. Get to know the mother of four here! It’s no mystery how country music singer-songwriter Chris Janson, 35 (born April 2, 1986), feels about his wife, 45-year-old Kelly Lynn (born September 28, 1975).

Does Blake Shelton sing on the song done with Chris Janson?

Janson produced the album with Tommy Cecil, Brock Berryhill, and Zach Crowell, who also co-wrote tracks on the album. It is also Cecil’s first production credit. Blake Shelton sings duet vocals on the title track.

What type of music is virtual insanity?

funk
“Virtual Insanity” is a song by British funk band Jamiroquai….Virtual Insanity.

“Virtual Insanity”
Genre Acid jazz jazz-funk
Length 5:40 (album version) 4:04 (single version) 3:46 (radio edit)
Label Sony Soho Square
Songwriter(s) Jay Kay Toby Smith

Does KJ APA sing?

As it turns out, KJ can sing! And he does his own voice performances. He’s been belting it out from an early age, even releasing his own musical instrumental rock album at the age of 14 called The Third Room. For the album, he was described as “the guitar prodigy from down under.”

Is the girl in Chris Jansons video Done his wife?

It has everything to do with his wife, Kelly Lynn, who is always a catalyst for Jansons’s love songs. But “Done,” in particular, captures the couple’s love story, Janson tells Taste of Country. “It’s my favorite song I’ve ever written,” Janson says.

Who sounds like Blake Shelton?

Similar To

  • Craig Morgan.
  • Jake Owen.
  • Justin Moore.
  • Trace Adkins.
  • Billy Currington.
  • Brad Paisley.
  • Bucky Covington.
  • Chris Cagle.

    When was the song done released?

    2019
    Done/Released

    Is the floor moving in virtual insanity?

    In a short making-of documentary, director Jonathan Glazer describes how the walls move on a stationary grey floor with no detail, to give the illusion that objects on the floor are moving. In several shots, chairs or couches are fixed to the walls so that they appear to be standing still, when in fact they are moving.