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The remix features fellow American rappers Young Jeezy, Young Dro, Big Kuntry King and B.G. T.I. performed the remix at the BET Hip Hop Awards on November 15, 2006. The song was also remixed in 2007, by American rapper Lil Wayne, freestyling over the song's beat for his mixtape Da Drought 3. The freestyle was titled "Seat Down Low".
At the time he was experimenting with 90's rave samples and the song originally used a Todd Terry sample but was re-recorded with session vocalist Yolanda Quartey and worked into a new song. [2] The song contains elements of the composition "Brass Disk", as written by Todd Terry and performed by Duprée, and lyrics from the song "Missing You ...
On December 8, 2010, Travis Porter released a remix of the song featuring American rapper Rick Ross. [5] Another remix featuring American rappers Yo Gotti and Gucci Mane was released on March 16, 2011. [6] Other artists that have released a remix to the song include Jermaine Dupri, [5] B.o.B [7] and R. Kelly. [8]
"Turn Back Time" is a song by Danish dance-pop group Aqua, released as their seventh single overall, and the sixth from their debut album, Aquarium (1997). The song was also included on the soundtrack for the 1998 film Sliding Doors , starring Gwyneth Paltrow , and was released across the world throughout 1998, starting with the United States ...
In 2007, Comeback Season spawned a single and a music video for "Replacement Girl", featuring Trey Songz, that was executive produced by Terral "T. Slack" of BPE.Also in 2007, Drake became the first unsigned Canadian rapper to have his music video featured on BET when his first single, "Replacement Girl", was featured as the "New Joint of the Day" on April 30, 2007.
It is a reggaeton song about exalting the attributes of women with breast and butt implants, an allegory to remix versions being better than the originals. Commercially, "Remix" reached number 147 on the Billboard Global 200 , as well as number one in Monitor Latino 's Puerto Rico and Mexico and the US Latin Airplay chart, as well as number ...
The original version of the song appeared on their 1988 self-titled debut album. The lead vocals on the track were sung by singer-songwriter Suzi Carr. [ 2 ] A 12" single was released to clubs in 1988, and this remix became the first of two number-one songs for the band on the American dance chart .
In the following week, the song fell off the chart. Two weeks later, the song re-entered the chart at number 83, on the week of April 28. [9] After climbing the chart for seven more weeks, the single reached its peak at number 11 on the chart dated June 16. [10] As of August 2012, the single had sold over 1.3 million copies digitally. [6]