Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Title screen of YouTube Originals. YouTube Premium, formerly known as YouTube Red, is a subscription service that provides advertising-free streaming of all videos hosted by YouTube, offline play and background playback of videos on mobile devices, access to advertising-free music streaming through YouTube Music, and access to "YouTube Original" series and films.
In 2007, the song was voted number 90 on VH1's "100 Greatest Songs of the 90s". [20] It was listed number 440 on Blender's list of "The 500 Greatest Songs Since You Were Born". [21] In 2010 it was number 106 on Pitchfork's "Top 200 Tracks of the 90s". [22] In 2011, VH1 ranked it as 11th on "40 Greatest One-Hit Wonders of the 90s".
Beginning December 5, 1998, the Hot 100 changed from being a "singles" chart to a "songs" chart. [2] Not only did Billboard start allowing airplay-only tracks to chart, it broadened its radio panel to include "R&B, adult R&B, mainstream rock, triple-A rock, and country outlets", which was formerly "confined to the mainstream top 40, rhythmic ...
The music samples the following: the 1980 disco single "Rescue Me" by A Taste of Honey; the song "Spread Love" by the a cappella group Take 6; the song "High Power Rap" by the rap group Crash Crew; the electric guitar riff from "Mama Used To Say" by Junior; the horn from "Get Up and Dance" by Freedom
The following is a list of songs by Jay-Z organized by alphabetical order. The songs on the list are all included in official label-released, albums, soundtracks and singles, but not white label or other non-label releases. Next to the song titles is the album, soundtrack or single on which it appears.
The song's melodic and talking vocals in English are provided by Angel X (Andreas Harde), and a short talking vocal by Sandra ("That's not the beginning of the end, that's the return to yourself, the return to innocence"), while an Amis chant ("Weeding and Paddyfield Song No. 1") sung by folk music duo Difang and Igay Duana opens the song and is repeated throughout.
The title is a mockery of American children's game Chutes and Ladders (also known in the United Kingdom as Snakes and Ladders), with the song's lyrics mostly consisting of nursery rhymes. It is the first Korn song to feature bagpipes. [8] The song uses the following nursery rhymes in its lyrics: [9] "Ring a Ring o' Roses" "One, Two, Buckle My Shoe"
The song's accompanying music video was briefly banned by MTV. [2] Mix-a-Lot defended the song as being empowering to curvaceous women who were being shown skinny models as an ideal for beauty. "Baby Got Back" topped the US Billboard Hot 100, and spent five weeks atop the chart. It was the second best-selling song in the US in 1992.