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Corona - The Rhythm Of The Night Jun 2026

stands as a monumental pillar of the Eurodance era. While it is widely celebrated for its infectious, high-energy hooks, the track also carries a complex production history and a legacy that continues to resonate in modern pop culture. Production and "Secret" Vocals

The song didn't just live in the 90s; it has proven to be immortal. It has been sampled, remixed, and covered countless times. You can hear its DNA in house music, in modern pop (think of the bassline in Rihanna’s “We Found Love”), and even in commercials.

In a world of increasingly complex and melancholic pop music, The Rhythm of the Night offers a radical simplicity. It has no irony, no darkness, no hidden agenda. It is four minutes of unapologetic, life-affirming energy. Corona - The Rhythm Of The Night

Some reviewers note a "heavy-hearted" or "nocturnal" undertone despite its uplifting energy, creating a sense of fleeting euphoria common in 90s dance music. Critical Reception and Impact

However, they added a twist. To give the project a mysterious, exotic image, they hired a Brazilian-Italian model named to mime the lyrics in music videos and perform live. stands as a monumental pillar of the Eurodance era

Here lies the most controversial and intriguing aspect of the Corona legacy: the voice.

Bontempi recruited Brazilian performer and model Olga Souza to be the face of the project. Souza was magnetic; she possessed the look, the swagger, and the stage presence required for the burgeoning MTV generation. Together, they crafted a track that would arguably become the blueprint for Eurodance. It has been sampled, remixed, and covered countless times

The song’s lyrics "Round and round we go..." were borrowed from a prior track, leading to an out-of-court settlement that eventually credited additional writers. Musical Analysis

Released via Robyx's label (DWA), the song first charted in Italy in late 1993. But it was the 1994 re-release that turned it into a monster. It hit (held off the top spot by Wet Wet Wet’s Love Is All Around —a crime dance purists have never forgiven). In the United States, at a time when grunge and hip-hop dominated, The Rhythm of the Night broke through, peaking at #11 on the Billboard Hot 100 and #2 on the Dance Club Songs chart.

Critics describe the track as a masterclass in early 90s dance-pop construction.

The face of Corona belonged to , a stunning Italian-Dominican model discovered at a gym. When the music video for The Rhythm of the Night aired on MTV (directed by the legendary Luca Lucini), audiences saw a vibrant, tattooed, raven-haired woman lip-syncing the lyrics with fierce energy. The public fell in love with "Olga Corona."

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