Five songs are played this year's Academy Award for Best Song: "Earned it" performed by Canadian The Weekend (Fifty Shades of Grey); "Manta Ray" written by Anohni (Racing Extinction: Countdown), "Simple Song # 3" David Lang (Youth); "Til It Happens To You" performed by Lady Gaga (The Hunting Ground), and "Writing's On The Wall", sung by Sam Smith (Spectre).
Note that the five candidates are very soft and sophisticated themes, however, each has a particular personality that helps acclimate each tape.
For example, "Earned it" has the reedy voice of The Weekend, perhaps an aesthetic that has recently permeated the taste of young people, a lot like Romeo Santos vocal (although their styles are different). However, it is a subject that emphasizes sensuality and eroticism of the film itself.
In the case of "Manta Ray", this is a sensitive issue, which assumes the point of view of the animal against the destructiveness of human beings.
Meanwhile, with "Simple Song # 3", it is very interesting how David Lang wrote the theme, copying the Google phrases like "when you whisper my name" finder: completed several judgments of this kind, and the result has been a strange and beautiful song at a time.
The video for "Til It Happens To You" is as raw as the film, which deals with sexual abuse at universities. But here Lady Gaga, an artist who gradually asserts its ability to print a special mark to his work, uses its most delicate to precisely the opposite accentuate records: aggressive.
Finally, the James Bond movie retells an issue that could give the bump the winning theme: Sam Smith can secure the prize thanks to its grangeada fame with the Grammys, and just get the Golden Globe 2016. "How live, how to breathe? "the singer along the theme constantly asks.
We will see the answer.