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Funk automotivo (also known erroneously as "Brazilian phonk" worldwide) is a musical subgenre that originated from funk mandelão, which itself descended from funk carioca, a genre that emerged in the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro in the 1980s. [1] [2] It is heavily related to funk montagem (funk MTG) and funk bruxaria. [3]
A sample of a drift phonk beat. Drift phonk, a subgenre of phonk, emerged in the late-2010s in Russia. [22] [23] It is characterized by the use of high bass, cowbells, and distorted sounds, [13] making the lyrics of the samples often unrecognizable. [23] Drift phonk tracks tend to have a greater tempo than normal phonk tracks. [6]
Funk carioca (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈfɐ̃k(i) kɐɾiˈɔkɐ,-kaɾ-]), also known as favela funk, in other parts of the world as baile funk and Brazilian funk, or even simply funk, is a Brazilian hip hop-influenced music genre from Rio de Janeiro, taking influences from musical styles such as Miami bass and freestyle.
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It was also used for two films of the Fast & Furious franchise: The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006) and Furious 7 (2015). A different and much faster-paced remix, by Soulwax, samples The B-52s song "52 Girls" throughout. This remix ended up on their remix album Most of the Remixes.
"Bawitdaba" by Kid Rock plays during the first race in the film with Lucas Black's character Sean Boswell racing against Zachery Ty Bryan's character Clay. "Ooh Ahh (My Life Be Like)" by GRITS featuring Toby Mac was featured in the film during a scene with Bow Wow's character Twinkie; the song was originally released on the group's 2002 album "The Art of Translation" and was later remixed by ...
Its first installment, Shutokō Battle '94: Drift King, was released in 1994 for the Super Famicom, while the latest installment is Tokyo Xtreme Racer, that released in early access on PC on 23rd January 2025 which is Genki's first major platform racing game release in 18 years as the last major release was back in September 2007.
"Tokyo Drift (Fast & Furious)" is a single by Japanese hip hop group Teriyaki Boyz. It features on the 2006 film The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift as the main theme and also features at the end credits. The song also appears in the band's second album Serious Japanese.