Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
On Friday, Nov. 22, Disney released a lyric video for Johnson's new song "Can I Get a Chee Hoo?" from the soon-to-hit-theaters Moana 2, as part of its soundtrack that is now available in full.
(Chong himself was a musician before beginning his collaboration with Cheech, most prominently as a songwriter and vocalist for Bobby Taylor & the Vancouvers in the late 1960s; [3] [4] he somewhat fictionalizes this in the song, however, stating not that he is from his real hometown of Vancouver, but instead from Pittsburgh.)
Olé is a Spanish interjection used to cheer on or praise a performance commonly used in bullfighting and flamenco dance. [2] In flamenco music and dance, shouts of "olé" often accompany the dancer during and at the end of the performance, and a singer in cante jondo may emphasize the word "olé" with melismatic turns.
Chee-Chee or Chee Chee may refer to: Chee-Chee, a monkey character in the Doctor Dolittle series of children's books; Chee-Chee, an ethnic slur against an Anglo-Indian or person of mixed Eurasian descent; also a reference to English spoken with a South Asian accent; Chee-Chee and Peppy, an American teen R&B vocal duo in the early 1970s
Any time there's a graduation and there is a Pacific Islander who steps up onstage, you can bet we are Chee Hoo-ing the loudest." The "Moana 2" song adopts this Pacific Islander greeting as a life ...
However, the song does allow Johnson to show off his ability to spit a verse. "I got bars," he insists. "I grew up loving hip-hop music. My love is hip-hop music and traditional country — put ...
This page was last edited on 21 October 2007, at 17:49 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Taylor Swift gave fans a gift at her Argentina concert Thursday night when she substituted words from one of her most iconic songs with a popular Argentinian expression in Spanish.