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[72] [73] [74] The music video is the fastest in YouTube history to cross the 200 million mark, in just four days and twelve hours after release, [75] [76] and the fastest by a music group to surpass 400 million views, doing so on September 26, 35 days after release. [77] It is the fastest music video by both a group and an Asian act to achieve ...
"Dynamite" is written in the key of E major, with a tempo of 120 beats per minute. [3] According to Cruz, "The song 'Dynamite' itself is about when you go to the club and when you go to a party and when you're just going out... you got to feel like, 'I'm just gonna explode.'" [1] Dr. Luke and Max Martin had written the melody, and asked Bonnie McKee to write lyrics.
The music video features Jellyfish Trainee and Produce 101 contestant Kim Na-young as the veiled woman. [20] Zelos charted at number 1 on the Gaon album chart selling cumulative 89,910 copies in April, [21] with the title song "Dynamite" charting at number 14 on the Gaon Digital Chart and number 4 on Billboard World Digital Songs.
J-Hope shared a dance practice video set to the tropical remix of BTS' "Dynamite" on the BangtanTV YouTube channel.
The single was released on both 7" and vinyl record formats by the RAK music label. The B-side was "Do It All Over Again". [6] In Australia, the single was released by RAK as "Dynamite", without the hyphen in the title. The song is featured in the soundtrack of the 2013 film Rush. [7]
The album was released internationally under the title Dynamite. [3] The album went on to be Jermaine's second-most successful album in the United States , peaking at No. 19 — 13 places below Let's Get Serious — on the main Billboard album chart, but becoming the #1 R&B album on July 7, 1984.
"Dynamite" is an upbeat pop and dancehall song. [4] [8] The Independent described it as a "feel-good dancefloor-filler". [5] It was produced by Canadian duo Banx & Ranx, Greg Kurstin, and Jason Jigzagula Henriques. Banx & Ranx and Kurstin were involved in songwriting too, alongside Paul, Sia, and Nyann "News" Lodge. [9]
"Dynamite" was written by former Drifters member Ian Samwell, who wrote several songs for Richard and the group.Due to the ways in which the New Musical Express chart (the canonical Official Singles Chart until 1960) was compiled at the time, the B-sides of some records gained enough popularity that they entered the chart, generally alongside the A-side.