Somewhere In The Night: Difference between revisions

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* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z8k-cwcRW_o q upload]
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z8k-cwcRW_o q upload]
[[Category:Unidentified]]

Revision as of 03:46, 13 June 2024

ⓘ This lostwave is classified as unsolved.

Somewhere In The Night
Alternative name(s) Love's Gonna Find You
Genre Pop Rock
Year 1980s
Original poster NeonBlue
Search started 2020

Somewhere In The Night is an unsolved lostwave snippet that was part of an 80s Mix created by NeonBlue. It is a somewhat bizarre lostwave case, as NeonBlue has confirmed they know the title and artist behind the song, but refuses to reveal this information.

Background

Somewhere In The Night was originally posted in 2020 as part of an 80s Mix by NeonBlue. NeonBlue originally claimed in a comment to know the artist behind the song, however refused to reveal the information. They later contradicted themselves on this multiple times, changing their story. NeonBlue would go back-and-forth on how long ago they recorded the song and even eventually denied knowing the title and artist.

Sometime after this NeonBlue deleted all the content on their channel.

Search

The band Wild And Blue was suggested as a possible artist, citing similar musical styles, however, according to q, this lead has been ruled out.

Rene Varo was also suggested as a potential singer, however, this seems highly unlikely and purely based on vocal comparison rather than empirical evidence.

Phyllis Rhodes Lead

In June 2024, the possibility of Phyllis Rhodes, former lead singer of the band Saint Tropez, being the singer was seriously considered, as she had a very similar voice. Rhodes was contacted by AltariaBoy and initially speculated the song was made by AI, using her voice. However, she suggested it could be one of her demos that went unreleased for legal and contractual reasons. Currently, Rhodes is contacting her producer to confirm if Somewhere In The Night is among these tracks.

Currently this lead is under debate by the community and is likely to be ruled out.

References