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We Invented the Remix is a remix compilation by P. Diddy & The Bad Boy Family, released on May 14, 2002. It features remixes of hit singles by artists from P. Diddy's Bad Boy Records record label . The album reached number one of the U.S. Billboard 200 albums chart for a week and was later certified Platinum for shipments of over one million ...
On June 29, 2010, the band re-released It's All Happening as a 3-disc special edition that includes the regular album, a remix album entitled "It's All Remixed!", and a DVD. [7] This special edition also includes song stems to allow fans to create their own remixes.
Jo Sung Mo Remix is the first remix with an available song from the default play (Heart Break) and with a song uncredited to an artist in the remix (Final Audition by BanYa). Mix 2-2 엄정화 리믹스 Uhm Jung Hwa: Pump It Up Perfect Collection: Known as "Uhm Jung Hwa Remix" Mixes Festival, Scarlet and I Don't Know Anything. Mix 2–3
" The song itself is a response to and parody of "Download This Song" by MC Lars. It is also a spoof of the ending song during the credits on Dickie Roberts: Former Child Star with all the former child stars. [3] "Don't Wear Those Shoes" Polka Party! (1986) Original, although the intro is in the style of The Kinks' "Father Christmas". [1]
New Old Songs is the only remix album by American nu metal band Limp Bizkit. Released on December 4, 2001, the album contains hip hop remixes of songs from the band's first three studio albums Three Dollar Bill, Y’all (1997) , Significant Other (1999) , and Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water (2000) .
Fans tweet song cover requests to Kelly via Twitter and each night, she'll pick one to cover. The 'fan request' segment spices up the set list at every stop -- making each performance unique for ...
In a mixed appraisal of the song, Tom Breihan of Stereogum stated that the remix is a "complete reworking of the original track that barely sounds anything like the original". Referring to the song as a "slamming house banger", he remarked on how the remix lacks the "incandescent hook" of the original version but does feature "some murmured ...
It is a reggaeton song about exalting the attributes of women with breast and butt implants, an allegory to remix versions being better than the originals. Commercially, "Remix" reached number 147 on the Billboard Global 200, as well as number one in Monitor Latino's Puerto Rico and Mexico and the US Latin Airplay chart, as well as number five ...