"Work from Home" also became the first top-five single in the country by a girl group in ten years, following the September 2006 peak of "Buttons" by The Pussycat Dolls at number three. The song debuted at number 12 on the Billboard Hot 100 with 88,000 downloads sold, and reached number four in its thirteenth week, becoming their highest charting single in the United States it surpassed "Worth It", which peaked at number 12. Many music publications included it in their lists of best songs of the year.
The song is primarily an R&B track that incorporates elements of trap music and tropical house beats with lyrics depicting "work" as a euphemism for sex.
"Work from Home" was written by Joshua Coleman, Dallas Koehlke, Jude Demorest, Tyrone Griffin, Jr., Alexander Izquierdo, and Brian Lee with production from Coleman and Dallas Koehlke. The song impacted contemporary hit radio four days after its initial release on Maand was released as the lead single from the group's second studio album, 7/27 (2016). The research comes as 60% of Brits find themselves working from home, according to research by comparison platform Finder."Work from Home" is a song recorded by American girl group Fifth Harmony featuring American singer Ty Dolla Sign. Pretty Little Thing, Universal and Time Out London were among the top brands putting together working from home playlists.
“But we’ve also looked at keeping morale positive by undertaking a variety of other activities including regular daily challenges from our CSR team, regular one-to-one check-ins, collective ‘pub quiz’ online games and events, as well as a Friday ‘virtual Prosecco hour’, which is a continuation of what we do with our people on a Friday when we’re normally in the office together.” “We created a collective Spotify ‘lockdown’ playlist and have subsequently followed up by developing our own internal ‘LACE radio’, which is edited and produced in house and distributed to the team, including song requests. “At LACE when we began remote working at the beginning of the current crisis we wanted to use music as a collaborative exercise to keep our people engaged. The company also collated a list of top artists, which was topped by Baroque composer Johann Sebastian Bach, closely followed by Taylor Swift and Fleetwood Mac.Ĭathy Acratopulo, managing director and co-founder of HR consultancy firm LACE Partners, said music can be an important part of how employees enhance their working from home experience. MC Hammer’s ‘U Can’t Touch This’ and Journey’s ‘Don’t Stop Believin’’ rounded out the list.īeyond the top ten, listeners were enjoying classic motivational tracks and songs particularly suited to current events - such as Destiny Child’s ‘Survivor’, The Bee Gees’ ‘Stayin’ Alive’ and Queen’s ‘I Want to Break Free’.Ĭomparison platform Business Comparison collated the list of top songs by identifying 393 Spotify playlists with titles referring to working from home and selecting the most frequently occurring songs on them. In seventh position came Harry Styles’ ‘Adore You’, followed by Britney Spears’ timeless ‘Toxic’. The Killers’ ‘Mr Brightside’ and The Police’s ‘Don’t Stand So Close to Me’ came in fourth and fifth, while Dua Lipa’s ‘Don’t Start Now’ scooped sixth place. Ty Dolla $ign)’ topped the list, followed by The Weeknd’s ‘Blinding Lights’ and Dolly Parton’s ‘9 to 5’.