Heardle answer April 8: Clues to help you guess, plus song revealed for today’s music puzzle

Heardle is the music game akin to Wordle, where guessing a song as quickly as you can, gets you more points. Here are clues and the answer for April 8
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Today’s (April 8) Heardle answer has been revealed and the mystery song is courtesy of a Swedish rock band active between the years 1973–1979.

Today’s mystery song was first released by B.J Thomas in 1968 - but today’s Heardle answer is a remix of this song. The cover version included the ooga chaka introduction from earlier covers. This version of the song also tweaked the lyrics to avoid a drug reference.

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If you’ve never played, Heardle is a music game you can play via a website app where you listen to the introduction of a song, with the goal of the game to guess the artist and title in as few turns as possible.

You can get multiple skips to reveal more of the song, up to a maximum of 16 seconds. Skip after that and the song is revealed giving you a grand total of zero points.

Of course, the quicker you guess the song and the fewer skips you use, the more points you will receive. Most songs provided on the app are tunes released in the last 10 years, so you need to brush up on recent music to be successful.

However, older music lovers still stand a chance, as remastered tracks also make it on the app, such as today’s song. If you have had too many attempts to guess the tune and don’t want to lose your winning streak, scroll down for the answer…

What is today’s Heardle song? (April 8)

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Today’s Heardle is: Hooked On A Feeling - Blue Swede, Björn Skifs (1973)

Heardle - Spotify’s audible answer to the runaway success of WorldleHeardle - Spotify’s audible answer to the runaway success of Worldle
Heardle - Spotify’s audible answer to the runaway success of Worldle

"Hooked on a Feeling" is a 1968 pop song, written by Mark James and originally performed by B. J. Thomas. Thomas’s version featured the sound of the electric sitar (played by Reggie Young) and reached number five in 1969 on the Billboard Hot 100. It has been recorded by many other artists, including Blue Swede, whose version reached number one in the United States in 1974.

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