Liam Payne fans say 'history was made' as they mark poignant 10-year anniversary
Fans of boyband One Direction have expressed their shock at the news that one of their songs was released 10-years ago. Night Changes came out back in 2014 and reached number six in the charts.
Sharing the anniversary news, Pop Base posted on X: "10 years ago today, One Direction released ‘Night Changes.’" They included four images from the music video.
In response, one fan wrote: : "IT'S BEEN 10 YEARS?? IT FELT LIKE IT WAS JUST YESTERDAY. omg, we all grew up in the blink of an eye." Another said: "history was made that day."
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"Song was so amazing i am still waiting for work together now we lost one legend sadly," a third added. It comes after Liam Payne, 31, died last month when he fell from a hotel balcony in Argentina on October 16.
Three people were arrested following the dad-of-one's death. The prosecutor charged one with "abandonment of a person followed by death" and supplying drugs. The suspect "accompanied the artist on a daily basis" during his stay in the Argentinian capital, according to a statement from the office of prosecutor Andres Esteban Madrea.
Prosecutors said: "From the beginning of the investigation and within a few days, exhaustive and meticulous actions and measures were carried out to clarify the circumstances surrounding the death of the artist. In this sense, several dozen statements were received at the headquarters of the Public Prosecutor's Office including the testimonies of hotel staff, family and friends and medical professionals."
The statement went on: “The results of the toxicological studies - already communicated to his family - revealed that, in the moments prior to his death and during at least his last 72 hours, Payne only had traces in his body of a poly-consumption of alcohol, cocaine and a prescribed anti-depressant. This conclusion was reached after full toxicological tests on urine, blood and vitreous humour, which were carried out in a very short time.
“The morticians of the Forensic Medical Corps (CMF) who carried out the autopsy were the director of the Judicial Morgue, Santiago Maffia Bizzozero, and the forensic doctor Roberto Víctor Cohen, who concluded that Payne's death was caused by ‘polytraumatisms’ and ‘internal and external haemorrhage’, as a result of the fall the musician suffered from the balcony of the third floor room of the hotel in the Palermo neighbourhood where he was staying."