@moonlightjvam: #oliviarodrigo #youseemprettysadforagirlsoinlove #newmusic #interview #zanelowe

v
v
Open In TikTok:
Region: US
Monday 15 June 2026 17:42:21 GMT
301199
56910
20
604

Music

Download

Comments

jojo.anne21
Jeanne :
That Disney channel media training is tight
2026-06-16 01:08:55
3611
pikpoklucy
pikpoklucy :
this is actually true. disney channel stars go through a boot camp of sorts.
2026-06-15 21:26:33
5556
cal_bean_
CalBean :
the subject.. is aware
2026-06-16 03:02:21
298
jennabennalovebug
jennabennalovebug :
kids can be brutally honest so i bet the media training is crazy
2026-06-16 03:05:22
53
juantological
Juan Madrigal :
I love her so much
2026-06-16 03:00:04
17
shortcakeirl
🍓 :
look at half of the other disney stars tho
2026-06-16 03:13:40
3
danielmazz
Daniel Mazz :
😂😂😂
2026-06-15 22:26:04
13
rosegold_03
Rose :
😂😂😂
2026-06-16 00:04:44
10
mc1are
mols :
@amber *ೃ༄ LMAOOO
2026-06-16 00:58:44
5
annefranksdivacup696
Lilah C :
@Patience
2026-06-16 03:30:43
0
To see more videos from user @moonlightjvam, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

The Studio Jimi Hendrix Built Before He Died New York City. 52 West 8th Street. Greenwich Village. Electric Lady Studios. 1970s. It did not look like a corporate recording facility. It felt like a hidden psychedelic room beneath the city. A studio. A control room. A lounge. A dream built by Jimi Hendrix before he died. In 1970, Hendrix opened Electric Lady Studios as his own creative sanctuary — a place where musicians could record, experiment, jam, and chase sound without the cold pressure of a normal commercial studio. The faces? Jimi Hendrix — the founder, standing inside the studio he dreamed into existence. Eddie Kramer — the engineer shaping the sound behind the glass. Steve Winwood — part of Hendrix’s early Electric Lady sessions. Patti Smith — connected to the opening-era story, and later to the studio through Horses. Eric Clapton — a guest at the grand opening. Ron Wood — another figure from that opening-night circle. Stevie Wonder — pushing soul and funk forward during his Electric Lady era. David Bowie — recording Fame in 1975. John Lennon — stepping into that Fame session as a co-writer and guest. Lou Reed — recording Sally Can’t Dance in the heart of the 1970s. Jimmy Page — representing Led Zeppelin’s classic Electric Lady connection. Mick Jagger — representing The Rolling Stones’ Electric Lady legacy. Nile Rodgers — bringing Chic’s disco-funk energy into the studio’s late-1970s story. Not as museum figures. Not as frozen legends. Just artists. Standing at microphones. Sitting at pianos. Leaning over consoles. Writing lyrics on paper. Smoking between takes. Waiting in warm lounges. Listening through studio monitors. Chasing the next sound inside one of New York’s most mythical rooms. One of the most fascinating things about Electric Lady Studios is how personal it felt. The room was not built to look like a factory. It was built to feel alive. Polished wooden floors. Persian rugs. Warm lamps. Analog consoles. Tape machines. Pianos. Guitars. A cosmic mural glowing behind the musicians. It was not just a studio. It was Hendrix’s dream room — and after he was gone, the dream kept recording. A short AI-generated film about imagined moments inside 1970s Electric Lady Studios — the studio Jimi Hendrix built, the room where rock, soul, funk, art-punk, disco, and downtown New York crossed paths, and the place where music history kept echoing through the walls. Note: This video is an AI-generated fictional recreation. It does not depict a documented real recording session or a confirmed moment where all featured figures were together at the same time. The scenes are designed as a symbolic tribute to Electric Lady Studios and the artists, engineers, bands, and creative energy connected to the studio across different sessions and years in the 1970s. #JimiHendrix #ElectricLadyStudios #1970sMusic #RecordingStudio #rockhistory
The Studio Jimi Hendrix Built Before He Died New York City. 52 West 8th Street. Greenwich Village. Electric Lady Studios. 1970s. It did not look like a corporate recording facility. It felt like a hidden psychedelic room beneath the city. A studio. A control room. A lounge. A dream built by Jimi Hendrix before he died. In 1970, Hendrix opened Electric Lady Studios as his own creative sanctuary — a place where musicians could record, experiment, jam, and chase sound without the cold pressure of a normal commercial studio. The faces? Jimi Hendrix — the founder, standing inside the studio he dreamed into existence. Eddie Kramer — the engineer shaping the sound behind the glass. Steve Winwood — part of Hendrix’s early Electric Lady sessions. Patti Smith — connected to the opening-era story, and later to the studio through Horses. Eric Clapton — a guest at the grand opening. Ron Wood — another figure from that opening-night circle. Stevie Wonder — pushing soul and funk forward during his Electric Lady era. David Bowie — recording Fame in 1975. John Lennon — stepping into that Fame session as a co-writer and guest. Lou Reed — recording Sally Can’t Dance in the heart of the 1970s. Jimmy Page — representing Led Zeppelin’s classic Electric Lady connection. Mick Jagger — representing The Rolling Stones’ Electric Lady legacy. Nile Rodgers — bringing Chic’s disco-funk energy into the studio’s late-1970s story. Not as museum figures. Not as frozen legends. Just artists. Standing at microphones. Sitting at pianos. Leaning over consoles. Writing lyrics on paper. Smoking between takes. Waiting in warm lounges. Listening through studio monitors. Chasing the next sound inside one of New York’s most mythical rooms. One of the most fascinating things about Electric Lady Studios is how personal it felt. The room was not built to look like a factory. It was built to feel alive. Polished wooden floors. Persian rugs. Warm lamps. Analog consoles. Tape machines. Pianos. Guitars. A cosmic mural glowing behind the musicians. It was not just a studio. It was Hendrix’s dream room — and after he was gone, the dream kept recording. A short AI-generated film about imagined moments inside 1970s Electric Lady Studios — the studio Jimi Hendrix built, the room where rock, soul, funk, art-punk, disco, and downtown New York crossed paths, and the place where music history kept echoing through the walls. Note: This video is an AI-generated fictional recreation. It does not depict a documented real recording session or a confirmed moment where all featured figures were together at the same time. The scenes are designed as a symbolic tribute to Electric Lady Studios and the artists, engineers, bands, and creative energy connected to the studio across different sessions and years in the 1970s. #JimiHendrix #ElectricLadyStudios #1970sMusic #RecordingStudio #rockhistory

About