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The song also topped the US Dance Club Songs chart, with Summer's follow-up "Bad Girls" as a double A-side. "Hot Stuff" was the seventh biggest song of 1979 in the US. [9] The popular 12" single edition of the song plays the full 6:47 version of the song and then segues into "Bad Girls" 4:55 version.
"Hot Stuff" was recorded in March, October and December 1975 during the Black and Blue sessions, and is heavily influenced by the disco/funk sounds of the day, with Charlie Watts laying down a heavy drum pattern accompanied by Ollie E. Brown on percussion, Bill Wyman adding a funky bassline, and extensive use of the Mutron III pedal by guest guitarist Harvey Mandel, formerly of Canned Heat.
"Hot Stuff (Let's Dance)" was released in November 2007 as the second single from Trust Me, following the single "This Is the Girl" with rapper Kano. It became a top ten hit in Croatia, Denmark, Finland, Hungary, Sweden, and the United Kingdom, while reaching the top 40 on the majority of all other charts it appeared on.
From in hot water to “Hot Stuff”! Boy Meets World is jam-packed with memorable moments, but it wasn’t until season 5 that audiences realized what they’d always needed — the men dancing ...
Hot Stuff, a 1984 album by La Mafia; Hot Stuff, a 1988 album by Buck Clarke "Hot Stuff (Let's Dance)", a 2007 song by Craig David from Trust Me "Hot Stuff" (Donna Summer song), a 1979 song from Bad Girls "Hot Stuff" (Rolling Stones song) from Black and Blue "Hot Stuff" (Kumi Koda song), Kumi Koda's 15th domestic single "Hot Stuff", a song by ...
“On the bright side, its a 70 degree day in November, so we might not even live through this administration,” wrote @petermarietoto. The post has 88,000 likes. The post has 88,000 likes.
A dance version to "Hot Stuff" was later released on the DVD of her third compilation album, Best ~Bounce & Lovers~, though this version omitted KM-MARKIT's appearance in the video. [ 4 ] Kumi would collaborate again with KM-MARKIT for the song "Rainy Day," which was released on his debut album, Vivid , though he was under the Pony Canyon label ...
But the name didn't stick, so advertisers just started embracing the original nickname. Newspaper ads were using "Black Friday" to call in eager shoppers as early as 1966, according to the Telegraph .