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The Kingsmen used the melody of "Alley Oop" for their song "Annie Fanny" (U.S. #47, 1965). [5] A British satirical art rock/pop group, The Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band, recorded a version of "Alley Oop," which was released as their second single in October 1966. The song's composer, Dallas Frazier, released his own version on his 1966 album Elvira.
Missundaztood (stylized as M!ssundaztood) is the second studio album by American singer Pink.It was released on November 20, 2001, by Arista Records.After the success of Can't Take Me Home, her 2000 debut album, Pink became dissatisfied with her lack of creative control and being marketed as a white R&B singer.
The music video for the single was released in early February 2003. The sequel to "Excuse Me Miss" was "La-La-La (Excuse Me Miss Again)" with a noticeably darker beat and lyrics, and was also produced by the Neptunes. The song was later re-released with "Stop" as a single for 2003's The Blueprint 2.1.
Pink is honoring the memory of her late father, Jim Moore, in her emotional new ballad, “When I Get There.” The 43-year-old Grammy winner introduced the song and its powerful new lyric video ...
The accompanying music video for "Miss You" was directed by Darren Grant and was filmed in November 2002 in Long Island City, New York, and Los Angeles. [33] The video includes segments from Aaliyah's previous music videos, alongside cameo appearances from Aaliyah's close friends and peers, who were shown lip-syncing to the song.
"Lawdy Miss Clawdy" follows an eight-bar blues progression and has been notated in 12/8 time in the key of A ♭. [10] The song's melody is derived from Fats Domino's 1950 hit "The Fat Man", [11] which he explained "came from an ol' blues tune called "Junkers Blues". [12] Price's song also features most of the same backing musicians as Domino's ...
UFO/Southpaw (UFO/サウスポー, Yūfō/Sausupō) is a greatest hits album by Japanese duo Pink Lady, released on June 1, 1979. It features the duo's singles from "Pepper Keibu" to "Pink Typhoon (In the Navy)", as well as their accompanying B-side songs.
A music video for "God Is a DJ" was directed by Jake Scott. It features scenes of Pink and others (assumed to be her roommates) getting dressed, having fun on a subway, and going to a nightclub. Pink then continues to bribe the bouncer – dressed in eccentric drag clothing – to enter the nightclub ahead of the queue.