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"Bad Reputation" is a song by American singer-songwriter Freedy Johnston, featured on his major label debut This Perfect World. It is his best known song, and has received airplay along with being featured in the 1996 film Kingpin and in the closing credits of the 1995 film Kicking and Screaming as well as appearing on an episode of Hindsight.
The band recorded "What Do You Want" for the Boogie Boy movie soundtrack in 1998. [20] Cody collaborated with Tom Waits, and performed guitar and banjo on the latter's 2004 album Real Gone and the Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers & Bastards boxset compilation released in 2006. [21] [22] In 2005, Cody composed the score for the film Wassup Rockers. [23]
Redhead Kingpin and the F.B.I. was an American hip hop/new jack swing group best known for its debut single and highest-charting song, "Do the Right Thing" from its album A Shade of Red, [1] which peaked at No. 13 on the UK Singles Chart in 1989. [2] The song was featured on the soundtrack of Wes Craven's horror film The People Under the Stairs.
"Do the Right Thing" is a song by American hip hop and new jack swing group Redhead Kingpin and the F.B.I. from their debut album, A Shade of Red (1989). The track was written for but not used in the Spike Lee film of the same name , but two years later, the song was featured on the soundtrack of Wes Craven 's horror film The People Under the ...
"But Anyway" is a song by the jam band Blues Traveler, and the lead track on their 1990 eponymous debut album, Blues Traveler. The song peaked at number 5 on the Adult Alternative Airplay chart on 12 July 1996, [1] and at number 24 on the Billboard Mainstream Top 40 on 30 August 1996.
American group Degrees of Motion released a version of "Do You Want It Right Now" in 1992, reaching #31 on the UK Singles Chart in May 1992. The song was re-released in 1994, peaking at #26 in June. [ 3 ]
Blue Bloods star Donnie Wahlberg goes from fictional crime to true crime as the host and executive producer of Very Scary People, a series that delves into the depths of nefarious crimes and the ...
The song was well-received by music critics. Ben Devlin of MusicOMH stated, "Pusha T's subject matter is well worn by now, his drug kingpin boasts familiar to anyone with an interest in American rap. His wordplay makes it, the hook of opening track If You Know You Know being a prime example". [9]