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"Hollaback Girl" is a song by American singer-songwriter Gwen Stefani from her debut solo studio album, Love. Angel. Music. Baby. (2004). It is a hip-hop song that draws influence from 1980s hip-hop and dance music.
Rolling Stone called the song a "total ripoff of Hollaback Girl", Gwen Stefani's 2005 number-one single. [12] A reviewer of About.com described the song as being "Hollaback Girl" "slathered in puerile sexual raunch". [13] Steve Yates of The Observer describes the song as being "much in the M.I.A. vein". [14]
Black then moved to the U.S., and his remaining unreleased tracks (plus some alternate versions of released songs) were assembled into another Sloan-Barri produced album, The Black Plague, in 1966. [3] Under the name "Terence" he released the album An Eye for An Ear by Decca Records in the U.S. and Canada in 1969.
Lyrically, the song is about the Black Plague – a theme across the entire Prequelle album – specifically about how people would literally dance and party until they died to cope with the illness. [13] [10] Europe was in this turmoil in the late 1340s. The plague is extremely fast.
T he plague sounds like something out of a history book. But the disease—nicknamed the “Black Death” or “Great Pestilence”—that killed more than 25 million people, about a third of ...
Stefani performing "Hollaback Girl", the third single from her debut solo album. Stefani announced a tour to support her first solo studio album Love. Angel. Music. Baby. (2004) on June 27, 2005, giving details of sixteen dates from October 16 to November 10. [2] [3] [4]
The film is set in England in 1348. While the Hundred Years War rages on between England and France, a detachment of soldiers returns to the estate of the beautiful English noblewoman Lady Matilda (Lena Headey) with news that her husband, Sir Walter de Mellerby (), was captured and remains hostage in France.
One young girl with a drug addiction died after collapsing on Day Three. The girl’s parents had taken out a $25,000 loan to pay for the program. Dr. McLellan, of the Treatment Research Institute, recalled a prominent facility he encountered in 2014 that made addicts wear diapers if they violated its rules.