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Musically, "Bring It All to Me" is a silky, slow-and-easy youth-leaning R&B track with a bouncing beat underneath "classy" piano keys. [2] [3] [4] The song was described by music journalist Chuck Taylor of Billboard as sounding "distinctive and like an old-school anthem" and "refreshing" in terms of the track's lyrical content amidst the "male-bashing" anthems from the time. [2]
Bring It On: Music from the Motion Picture was released by Epic Records on August 22, 2000. It features multiple tracks from Blaque , who play Clovers cheerleaders in the film. [ 47 ] It also includes songs from Daphne & Celeste , 3LW , and a cover of the Toni Basil song " Mickey " by B*Witched .
Blaque (/ ˈ b l æ k / BLAK) is an American girl group; they had songs chart from 1999 to 2004. Outside of the United States, they are known as Blaque Ivory . Their self-titled debut album Blaque sold more than 1 million copies and was certified Platinum.
The song charted at number 91 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs. [44] Reed felt that Blaque Out was the group's best album. [6] She is credited as a songwriter on it. [45] In a review of Blaque Out, Demetria Lucas of Vibe criticized Reed's verses and vocals as too similar to Lopes and wrote it "makes for monotony". [46]
Kirsten Dunst has proved she’s still our Captain T-T-T-Torrance. Dunst, 42, recited the words to "I’m Sexy, I’m Cute," the iconic cheerleading song from her hit 2000 film Bring It On, in a ...
Their debut album Blaque (1999) sold more than 1.5 million copies and was certified Platinum. Billboard named Blaque as the fourth "Best New Artist" in 1999. [4] In 2000, DeVoe portrayed a cheerleader named Lava in the comedy film Bring It On. [5] Blaque went on hiatus until 2007 and eventually split in 2008.
'Bring It On' might be the best sports movie of all time. There, we've said it. Move over 'Blindside,' the Toros have taken over.
Blaque produced two top ten hits on the US Billboard Hot 100, including "808" and "Bring It All to Me." Blaque's second album Blaque Out was initially expected to be released on December 11, 2001 in United States, [3] but received a Japan-wide physical release on January 29, 2002 only amid the commercial failure of lead single "Can't Get It ...