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What a Girl Wants" inspired the title of the 2000 romantic comedy film What Women Want, having the track on its soundtrack [74] and on a scene. [75] It also inspired the title of the 2003 comedy film of the same name. [76] The song appears in the video game Karaoke Revolution Presents: American Idol (2007). [77]
"Boogie On Reggae Woman" is a 1974 funk song by American Motown artist Stevie Wonder, released as the second single from his seventeenth studio album, Fulfillingness' First Finale, issued that same year. Despite the song's title, its style is firmly funk/R&B and neither boogie nor reggae.
"Everybody Wants Some!!" is a song by the American hard rock band Van Halen it is the second track off their 1980 album Women and Children First. It is one of the band's most popular songs, starting as a concert highlight throughout the band's early career.
"What These Bitches Want" (edited for radio as "What You Want" or "What They Really Want") is a song by American rapper DMX, released as the third single from his third album ... And Then There Was X (1999). The song features Sisqó from the group Dru Hill, while his fellow group member Nokio the N-Tity produced the song and provided background ...
"Girls Like You" topped YouTube's 2018 Songs of the Summer list globally, and ranked third in the United States. [39] It is also Vevo's most viewed video of 2018, and at third on YouTube's Top 10 music videos of 2018, respectively. [40] [41] The video was named the 23rd-most iconic pop music video of the 2010s by PopSugar. [42]
"What I Want" is a song by German singer Lena Meyer-Landrut. It was written by Meyer-Landrut along with Joe Walter and Pascal "Kalli" Reinhardt, while production was helmed by the latter. It was written by Meyer-Landrut along with Joe Walter and Pascal "Kalli" Reinhardt, while production was helmed by the latter.
In the booklet of their 1999 album 69 Love Songs, The Magnetic Fields' frontman Stephin Merritt described "Your Woman" as one of his "favourite pop songs of the last few years." [4] In 2004, Q magazine featured the song in their list of "The 1010 Songs You Must Own". [16] In 2010, Pitchfork named it the 158th best track of the 1990s. [5]
Allmusic editor David Jeffries called this song completely unsurprising, with rock-solid hook. [2] Ken Copabianco described the song: His "sex talk is good-natured and slyly insightful about love ("What Them Girls Like")" [3] XXL Magazine wrote a mixed review: "Elsewhere, he’s just straight reaching—“What Them Girls Like,” for instance, where, despite taking a cue from 2000’s Mel ...