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"Ass Back Home" (edited version titled as "Get Yourself Back Home") is a song by American group Gym Class Heroes featuring British singer-songwriter Neon Hitch. The song was first released on October 31, 2011, [ 2 ] as the second single from the group's fifth studio album, The Papercut Chronicles II .
"Stereo Hearts" is a song by American rap rock group Gym Class Heroes featuring Maroon 5 frontman Adam Levine. The song was released on June 14, 2011, as the lead single from the group's fifth studio album The Papercut Chronicles II (2011). [2] The song topped the Billboard Mainstream Top 40 and also reached number four on the Hot 100.
Gym Class Heroes was an American rap rock band from Geneva, New York. The group formed in 1997 when Travie McCoy met drummer Matt McGinley during their high school gym class . The band's music displays a wide variety of influences, including hip hop , rock , funk , and reggae .
Judy Patterson Wright, 1996, Social Dance Instruction, Human Kinetics Publishers, ISBN 978-0873228305; Diane Jarmalow, 2011, Teach Like a Pro, Ballroom Dance Teachers College, ISBN 978-0983526100; Rudi Trautz, 2021, The Art of Teaching Social Dancing, ISBN 978-3943599862; Thomas Hill, 2022, How to Teach Ballroom Dancing, ISBN 979-8842347698
"Cupid's Chokehold" is a song by American rap rock band Gym Class Heroes, featuring the vocals of Patrick Stump of Fall Out Boy. The song relies heavily on the music and chorus from Supertramp's hit song "Breakfast in America" written by Roger Hodgson and Rick Davies.
Partner dance may be a basis of a formation dance, a round dance, a square dance or a sequence dance. These are kinds of group dance where the dancers form couples and dance either the same choreographed or called routines or routines within a common choreography—routines that control both how each couple dances together and how each couple ...
Enjoy a classic game of Hearts and watch out for the Queen of Spades!
Articles relating to partner dance, dances whose basic choreography involves coordinated dancing of two partners, as opposed to individuals dancing alone or individually in a non-coordinated manner, and as opposed to groups of people dancing simultaneously in a coordinated manner.