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School Daze: Original Soundtrack Album is the music soundtrack album to Spike Lee's 1988 film School Daze. The soundtrack peaked at number 14 on the Billboard Top R&B Albums chart. The soundtrack features the songs " Da Butt " by E.U. and "Be Alone Tonight" which features Tisha Campbell .
(The NBC sitcom was airing its first season at the time of the film's release.) [5] Other School Daze cast members also appeared on A Different World, including Dominic Hoffman, Tisha Campbell, Art Evans, Guy Killum and Roger Guenveur Smith. In 2008, Alicia Keys paid homage to School Daze in the music video for her song "Teenage Love Affair ...
"Da Butt" is a single released in 1988 from the original soundtrack to the film School Daze. The song was written by Marcus Miller and performed by the D.C.-based go-go band E.U. The song reached number one on the Billboard's Hot Black Singles chart [1] for the week of April 23, 1988, and was ranked #61 on VH1's 100 Greatest One Hit Wonders of ...
Songs about school have probably been composed and sung by students for as long as there have been schools. Examples of such literature can be found dating back to Medieval England. [ 1 ] The number of popular songs dealing with school as a subject has continued to increase with the development of youth subculture starting in the 1950s and 1960s.
School Daze Revisited (also titled as School Daze Revisited...20 Years later) is a studio album released on September 18, 2007, [1] by the Washington, D.C.–based go-go band E.U. & Friends. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The album was dedicated to the Class of 1988.
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BBC's Andy Puleston wrote that together with singles "Air For Life" and "Alone Tonight", Tri-State was a "sterling effort" to create a record that defines trance music the same way Faithless and Orbital did with their respective genres, but nevertheless "does little to deviate or expand on the brief". [9]
The Madchester sound had been developing during the later 1980s, [1] from its nascent jangly sounds originally showcased on the NME's classic C86 cassette. By 1990, Madchester and related music was becoming more mainstream, but Happy Daze's release helped to crystallise awareness of the new overall Madchester sound by featuring tracks from several different yet converging forces.