Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Like many of Costello's songs, "Pump It Up" features frequent double entendres, with the surface-level references to pumped-up music masking the song's description of "a risqué encounter with a girl so enticing, [Costello] likens her to a narcotic", according to The Virginian-Pilot's Amy Poulter. [10] [11]
Song Title (English/Korean) Artist Latest appearance Notes Ignition Starts 이그니션 스타츠 BanYa: Pump It Up Prime 2: Ignition Starts is the first PIU Original song, as well as the very first song in Pump It Up series, and one of the handful of PIU original songs that were not revived in Pump It Up Fiesta until its revival in Pump It Up Prime ver. 1.01.0.
"Pump It Up!" is a song by Belgian musician Danzel. It was released in 2004 as the second single from his debut album, The Name of the Jam . The song is a mash-up of "Pump It Up!"
Other Betsy's songs that went viral on social media were "Я тебе поставлю лайк" ("I'll Give You a Like") [5] [6] and "Pump It Up". In the spring of 2024, she released a song titled "Я не пон" (lit. "I Didn't Understand"), that was based on hate messages she had received on the Internet.
Denise "Dee" Barnes (stage names Sista D and D Zire) is an American rapper and former Fox television personality who performed in the West Coast hip hop female duo Body & Soul and hosted a radio show on KDAY, prior to gaining wider fame as the host of Fox's hip hop show Pump It Up!, a weekly FOX TV rap music series on air from 1989-1992, according to IMDb.
The music video was partially inspired by the 2002 film, The Ring, [citation needed] and begins with three women putting a videotape containing Pump It Up into a VCR player. Budden then appears on the television screen and eventually walks out of it, when the video cuts to him performing the song to a large crowd in a park.
"Pump Up the Jam" is the opening track on Belgian act Technotronic's first album, Pump Up the Jam: The Album (1989). It was released as a single on 18 August 1989 [6] by Swanyard and SBK Records, and was a worldwide hit, reaching number two in the United Kingdom in late 1989 and on the US Billboard Hot 100 in early 1990.
All the three singles off of the album —"The Fat Boys Are Back", "Hard Core Reggae" and "Don't Be Stupid"— made it to the US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart, reaching No. 27, 52 and 62, respectively. The song "Pump It Up" was performed in the film Krush Groove during the Disco Fever scene. [5]