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"Kick It" (Korean: 영웅; Hanja: 英雄; RR: Yeong-ung; lit. Hero) is a song recorded by South Korean boy band NCT 127.It was written by Wutan, Rick Bridges and Danke of Lalala Studio, composed by Dem Jointz, Deez, Mayila Jones, Rodnae "Chikk" Bell, Ryan S. Jhun and Yoo Young-jin, and arranged by Jointz, Deez and Yoo.
The music video for "Kick It" was directed by Dawn Shadforth and Alex Smith. It shows Peaches and Iggy fighting against some zombies. The video begins with zombies walking on the streets while Peaches and Iggy are yelling the lyrics at each other. They hit the zombies throughout the video until they've beaten them all down.
"Can I Kick It?" is a song by American hip hop group A Tribe Called Quest, released in October 1990 by Jive Records as the third single from their debut album, People's Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm (1990). [1]
Flip It, Kick It! surpassed 300,000 copies sold in pre-orders as of January 15. [12] In South Korea, the EP debuted on the top of the Circle Album Chart in the chart issue dating January 19–25, 2025. It also debuted at number 47 on Japan's Oricon Albums Chart in the chart issue dating January 20–26, 2025, with approximately 1,000 copies sold.
"Kick It" (Lil Nas X song), 2019 "Kick It" (NCT 127 song), 2020; See also. Kickin' It, a comedy television series on Disney XD from 2011 to 2015;
"Kick It Out" is a short, fast-tempo hard rock song recorded by the rock band Heart, written by Ann Wilson. It was released as the third and final single from the band's second album Little Queen in 1977.
The song starts out with an electric guitar intro, leading up to Post Malone's first few lines. The beat adds in and Preme starts rapping. It then alternates between the two until a rise starts (at 1:14) and then Post Malone sings the phrase "now your bitch wanna kick it, Jackie Chan".
"Just Kickin' It" is an urban ballad in which vocals are the focus, and the instrumental foundation is otherwise sparse. [3] Jermaine Dupri, who according to his father, Columbia Records executive Michael Mauldin, wanted Xscape to be "the ghetto En Vogue," [4] originally wrote the song as a summary of what men wanted from women. [4]