What's Love Got to Do with It
Kygo
Tina Turner's original is so embedded in cultural memory that working around it requires either audacity or exceptional restraint — Kygo chooses the latter, and the choice pays off. The production here swaps the 1984 track's synth-pop angularity for something warmer and more oceanic: rolling piano figures, a gently pulsing rhythm, textures that feel like late afternoon light through a window. Turner's voice remains untouched, and that's the revelation — the 80s production always competed with her, while Kygo's arrangement simply holds space for her. The roughness in her tone, that lived-in quality that no vocal processing can manufacture, lands differently against a backdrop that isn't fighting for attention. The song's core argument — that passion and attachment operate outside the logic of love, that desire and intimacy can be separate registers — hits with renewed clarity when the instrumentation quiets down enough for you to actually hear what she's saying. This is a rare case of a remix that functions as genuine reinterpretation rather than recontextualization. It arrived in 2019 as part of a late-career moment for Turner and demonstrated that the song always had more room in it than its era allowed. Play it when you want something that feels both nostalgic and immediate, when you want to be reminded that a great vocal performance has no expiration date.
medium
2010s
warm, oceanic, spacious
Global pop remix of American 1980s pop-soul
Electronic, Pop. Tropical House / Remix. nostalgic, serene. Begins with gentle warmth and deepens into something unexpectedly moving as the vocals reveal themselves more clearly, ending in quiet revelation.. energy 4. medium. danceability 5. valence 6. vocals: legendary lived-in female contralto, rough-edged and powerful, no processing. production: rolling piano figures, oceanic synth textures, restrained tropical arrangement. texture: warm, oceanic, spacious. acousticness 3. era: 2010s. Global pop remix of American 1980s pop-soul. When you want something both nostalgic and immediate, to be reminded that a great vocal performance has no expiration date.