8 Songs Millennials Don’t Know Are Remakes

Your childhood was a lie.

Lou Bega Mambo No 5
Lautstark

Millennials, you’re so vain, you probably think this list is about you. Though to be fair, in this case it is about you.

'Rolling Stone's Playlist Of Greatest Songs For 18-34 Year-Olds' showed that Gen Y enjoys music from all eras. 1970's disco smashes, such as The Bee Gees’ “Stayin’ Alive”, and 1960’s peace and love anthems like “For What It’s Worth” both make the cut. There are, however, a few tunes that this 'me, me, me' generation incorrectly thinks belongs to 'them, them, them'.

That is not to say millennial’s taste in music is bad, they just need to brush up on their musical history. With a little help from the following entries, I'll help them discover which songs were not made, but rather remade for them.

If there are any other songs more commonly associated with modern artists, let us know in the comments below.

8. Torn - Natalie Imbruglia

This 1997 hit by Australian singer/actress Natalie Imbruglia was so heartfelt and emotional, it was assumed “Torn” was ripped right from her soul. Some twenty years later, the Twitterverse was shaken with the news that, not only is this song a remake, but it’s a remake of a remake of a remake.

See, in 1993, West Coast alt-rockers Ednaswap wrote the song, but Sørensen, a Danish singer, was the first to record it. She translated the song into Danish and renamed Brændt (‘Burnt’ in English). The instrumentation sounds similar to the hit version, but the vocals are far from Imbruglia-esque.

Next up, it was Ednaswap's turn to tear up Torn with their own grungy version recorded in 1995.

Finally in 1997, four years after its original conception, a hit song was born and sold more than 4 million copies worldwide and one million copies in the United Kingdom alone.

 
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A Chandler who wishes he was a Joey, would settle on being a Ross, but a Gunther at heart.