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The song has a characteristic bass line and is set to a funk beat.For the most part, it is built entirely on a two-chord vamp: a i-IV in B ♭ Dorian (B ♭ m7 and E ♭ 7). [5] The piece's signature 12-note bass line was played by Hancock on an ARP Odyssey, [6] [7] as was one of the keyboard solos.
The song's production consists of strong, "groovy" bass lines, "funky" disco beats, and dance rhythms. [10] Lyrically, "Boom Boom Bass" is about "celebrating the power of music" and "connecting with others through sound. [11] "Boom Boom Bass" was composed in the key of F minor, with a tempo of 117 beats per minute. [12]
Musically, "Pretty Please" is a midtempo disco-pop, electro-R&B and funk song. [5] [6] [7] It uses futuristic and retro styles employing elements of early 2000s R&B slow jams. [8] The song has a length of 3:14 and is composed in the time signature of 4 4 time [9] and the key of C ♯ major, with a tempo of 107 beats for minute.
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Baker said he was certain of this and admitted to stealing the "Rock rock to the Planet Rock, don't stop." line from the record "Body Music" by The Strikers, which had the line "Punk rock to the punk rock, don't stop." [6] Jay Burnett, who engineered the song, performed the "rock rock to the planet rock, don't stop" vocal. [6]
"Insatiable" is a pop-soul funk song with slight elements of Electropop and R&B.It features a hard drum beat, claps, synthesizers, a guitar riff and a heavy bass. The song sample's 1979 Prince song, "I Wanna Be Your Lover" in which notes its similarity in the bass and the melody.
"Funkin' for Jamaica (N.Y.)" is a song by jazz trumpeter Tom Browne. The single—a memoir of the Jamaica neighborhood in the New York City borough of Queens where Browne was born and raised—is from his second solo album, Love Approach.
The song was released on 20 November 2000 as Public Domain's debut single. On 26 November, it debuted at number five on the UK Singles Chart and stayed at that position for another week. Throughout December 2000 and early 2001, the track charted in at least 10 other countries, peaking within the top 10 in Australia, Austria, Germany, and Norway.