Home | Songs By Year | Songs from 1996


Ameno (song)

Buy Ameno (song) now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the song. And once you've experienced the song, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




"'Ameno'" is a song by French new-age musical project Era (stylized as +eRa+). It was released in June 1996 as a single from their self-titled debut album 'Era' and became a chart success in France, Belgium, Sweden, Switzerland, Poland and Latin America.

Background



"Ameno" was written by new-age artist Eric Lvi. The lyrics, by Guy Protheroe, are written in Pseudo-Latin, i.e. sounding like Latin but are in fact deliberately devoid of any exact meaning. The vocals are performed by Guy Protheroe and Harriet Jay. Eric Lvi played keyboards and programmed it, whereas Philippe Manca played lead guitar, bass and drums. The choir rendition is by The English Chamber Choir.

Music video



A music video for "Ameno" was shot for the song featuring actors Lonore Confino (sword girl) (version 1), Irne Bustamante, and Pierre Boisserie (version 2). The music video, set in medieval times, shows three children who go on an excursion to Montsgur. The girl sees a monument and when she touches it she seems to have memories of a past life. In her vision, a girl (perhaps herself) is seen with a group of children and an eagle on her arm. They are apparently homeless and looking for a place to camp; the place they choose is the same monument from the beginning of the video. Almost simultaneously a knight goes to the same place and when he arrives he tries to behead the monument with his sword, but is unsuccessful. The sword falls near the girl who manages to break the monument. Inside there is a medallion in the shape of a cross. The girl from the beginning of the video reappears and is wearing the same medallion.

Charts



Weekly charts



Year-end charts



Certifications



Other versions



The song has been interpreted many times and is very popular in covers and parodies.

Famous versions include DJ Quicksilver (2000), Roberto Molinaro techno mix version in Italy (2005) and French tenor Vincent Niclo interpretation with the Red Army Choir (2012).

DJ Quicksilver version



A remix of "Ameno" was made by Turkish-German DJ and music producer DJ Quicksilver. It appeared in the 'Clubfiles - The Album' by DJ Quicksilver and was a hit for him in a number of countries including singles charts in Austria, Belgium (Wallonia French charts), Germany, the Netherlands, and Switzerland. It was produced by Tommaso De Donatis and by Orhan Terzi (actually DJ Quicksilver himself using his real name).

Track lists



=CD maxi (Polydor)

=

#"Ameno" (video mix) (3:28)

#"Ameno" (club mix) (6:20)

#"Ameno" (C.J. Stone remix) (6:22)

#"Voyage" (6:10)

=CD maxi (ADN Progressive)

=

#"Ameno" (radio edit) (3:28)

#"Ameno" (video mix) (3:00)

#"Ameno" (club mix) (7:30)

#"Ameno" (De Donatis mix) (8:14)

#"Ameno" (C.J. Stone remix) (7:39)

#"Ameno" (Analog masters remix) (6:01)

#"Ameno" (OG Sterling Amapiano remix) (3:41)

Charts



Vincent Niclo & Les Churs de l'Arme Rouge version



French tenor Vincent Niclo recorded the song accompanied by the MVD Ensemble (widely known as Red Army Choir or in French as credited in the recording, "Les Churs de l'Arme Rouge").



The song appeared on his album 'Opra rouge' and was released as a single in France reaching #87 in SNEP, the official French Singles Chart.

Charts



Ameno Amapiano Remix



A cover known as "Ameno Amapiano Remix" was made by Ghanaian music producer, Nektunez who paired Nigerian Singer, Goya Menor. It charted at number 1 on the billboard music chart. It was released on 16 June 2021. Goya Menor was inspired to remix the original while listening to the song in a night club. The song was sung and rapped by Menor while Nektunez served as the producer and song writer. "Ameno Amapiano Remix" became popular in late 2021 and was commonly used in night clubs to announce when expensive drinks are purchased. It also gained popularity on the social networking site, TikTok and was used in over half a million videos and responsible for the internet slang, "You want to bambam". It is regarded as the anthem of Detty December. Menor performed the song at the Livespot X Festival by Tiwa Savage.

In popular media



The use of the song in YouTube videos and Twitch streams has led to its popularisation as an internet meme, with a resurgence in popularity as a TikTok meme in early 2020.

References



Internet memes

Category:Internet memes introduced in 2020

https://audiomack.com/ogsterling/song/ameno-amapiano

Buy Ameno (song) now from Amazon

<-- Return to songs from 1996



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1107101482.