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"Dum Da Dum" is a song by Swedish recording artist Melodie MC (a.k.a. Kent Lövgren), released in 1993 by Sidelake Productions and Virgin as the third single from his debut album, Northland Wonderland (1993). The song is written by Lövgren, featuring female vocals by Mayomi (a.k.a. Pia Sjöberg).
When the single "Dum Da Dum" was released, it became popular in many countries. During this time Melodie MC was busy touring many countries outside Scandinavia and all over Europe. As for the second album The Return, "Bomba Deng" was sung once again by Mayomi and "Safe Sex" by Charlie King. Roberto Romboni took part on "Give It Up!
Dum Dum" is a song written by Jackie DeShannon and Sharon Sheeley and performed by Brenda Lee. The song reached #4 on the Billboard Hot 100, #4 in Australia, and #22 in the UK in 1961. [2] It was featured on her 1961 album, All the Way. [3] The song was produced by Owen Bradley. [4] The singles B-side, "Eventually", reached #56 on the Billboard ...
In 1966, Bobby Vinton released a version of the song, retitled "Dum-De-Da", as a single. Vinton's version spent 6 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, peaking at No. 40, [10] while reaching No. 24 on Billboard ' s Middle-Road Singles chart, [11] [12] No. 32 on the Cash Box Top 100, [13] No. 35 on Record World ' s "100 Top Pops", [14] and No. 29 on Canada's RPM 100.
The album spawned two singles; "Nobody Does It Like You" and "Dum Da Dum". In 2015, he released the songs "Victoria" and "Obsession", [ 2 ] and was dropped by Universal Music . 2020–present: Resurgence
The theme is in two parts: an opening signature "Main Title" ("Dum - - - de - DUM - DUM") and the "Dragnet March" used over the end credits. Popular chart hit versions were recorded by Ray Anthony and his Orchestra (1953) and The Art of Noise (1987).
Composer Mike Post created the iconic "dun-dun" sound heard on "Law & Order" shows like the original, "SVU" and "Organized Crime" after Dick Wolf asked him to.
It compiles 11 songs recorded by Redding in a three-week stretch of sessions that concluded days prior to his death in December 1967. [1] "The Happy Song (Dum-Dum)" was the only song previously released, having been a single in April 1968.