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"Triple Trouble" is a song by the American hip hop group Beastie Boys, released as the second single from their sixth studio album To the 5 Boroughs. It heavily samples " Rapper's Delight " by the Sugarhill Gang , and interpolates lyrics from "Double Trouble at the Amphitheatre" by Double Trouble.
Triple Trouble may refer to: Triple Trouble, starring Charlie Chaplin; Triple Trouble, a Bowery Boys film; 3pol Trobol: Huli Ka Balbon!, a 2019 Philippine film "Triple Trouble" (song), by the Beastie Boys; Sonic the Hedgehog: Triple Trouble, a video game starring Sonic the Hedgehog
Too Much Trouble (often abbreviated to "TMT") is an American gangsta rap group from Houston, Texas. The group produced three albums before disbanding in 1997. The group produced three albums before disbanding in 1997.
The song was first released on December 29, 2008 via his MySpace page. [6] A lyrics video for the song was released on November 11, 2011. [7] "Trouble" was written and produced by Christofer Drew. [8] The track runs at 120 BPM [9] and is in the key of B major to E major. [10] Drew's range in the song spans from the notes D4 to D6. [9]
"Trouble" is a song recorded by British recording artist Leona Lewis and American entertainer Childish Gambino for Lewis' third studio album, Glassheart (2012). Inspired by Lewis' break-up with childhood sweetheart Lou Al-Chamaa, "Trouble" is a mid-tempo R&B and trip hop ballad, with a piano and strings -driven melody.
The song's music video begins with a shot of B-Real sitting in his car trying make a call on his cellphone. After his phone dies, he exits the vehicle to use a payphone. Having no change, B-Real places a $100 bill in a cup belonging to a person sleeping on the streets and takes a quarter out of the
"Trouble" has been described as a folk rock song, borrowing musical elements from Mumford & Sons, The Lumineers and Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros. [1] Driven by the banjo as the lead instrument in the song, the track makes use of the voices of all four band members to create a crowd-like cheer that is used in the song's chorus and latter verses, an effect similar to the one used in ...
The narrator concurrently begins to boast about the female's characteristics and features, and implies a great sense of trouble (hence the song's hook, "I smell T-R-O-U-B-L-E") that the female could cause as a result, such as bringing her attractiveness to the attention of males that notice or approach her, and subsequently inflicting jealousy ...