Amy Winehouse - Rehab

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Uploaded By: Adam Rangihana . Category: General . Added on: 02 June 2014.
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Amy Winehouse At The BBC - Out Now
Buy It Now http://bit.ly/AmyWinehouseAtTheBBC
Also available on Amazon http://bit.ly/AWBBCAmazon

The estate of Amy Winehouse is donating the record royalties it receives from the sale of this box set to the Amy Winehouse Foundation.

Music video by Amy Winehouse performing Rehab. YouTube view counts pre-VEVO: 3,993,824. (C) 2006 Universal Island Records Ltd. A Universal Music Company.
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Adam Rangihana
Adam Rangihana
Rehab (Amy Winehouse song)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Rehab"
Single by Amy Winehouse
from the album Back to Black
B-side "Do Me Good", "Close to Front"
Released 23 October 2006 (UK)
20 March 2007 (US)
Format CD single, digital download
Recorded 2006
Genre Soul,[1][2][3] R&B[1][4]
Length 3:35
Label Island
Writer(s) Amy Winehouse
Producer(s) Mark Ronson
Certification Platinum (RIAA)
Amy Winehouse singles chronology
"Pumps"/"Help Yourself"
(2004) "Rehab"
(2006) "You Know I'm No Good"
(2007)
Amy Winehouse U.S. singles chronology
"You Know I'm No Good"
(2007) "Rehab"
(2007) "Tears Dry on Their Own"
(2007)
Back to Black track listing
"Rehab"
(1) "You Know I'm No Good"
(2)
Alternative cover
Remix cover featuring Jay-Z
Audio sample
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"Rehab" is a song by English singer-songwriter Amy Winehouse, released on 23 October 2006 as the first single from her second studio album, Back to Black (2006). Written by Winehouse and produced by Mark Ronson, the lyrics are autobiographical, and talk about Winehouse's refusal one time to enter a rehabilitation clinic. It peaked at number 7 in the UK on its Singles Chart and number 9 in the US on the Billboard Hot 100,[5][6] her first top ten hit in the US.

It has become a critical and commercial success internationally, and has been referred to as Amy Winehouse's "signature song".[7] It won three Grammy Awards in 2008, including Record of the Year, Song of the Year, and Best Female Pop Vocal Performance, and was nominated for two more.[8] It also won an Ivor Novello Award for Best Contemporary Song.[9] Winehouse's public battle with drug and alcohol addiction, and subsequent death, has resulted in some of the song's continuing popularity and appearance in the media. The song has been covered by a list of artists, from Seether to Jamaican Mento band The Jolly Boys, and from Hot Chip to Lea
10 years ago