Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Candy" is a song from Iggy Pop's ninth solo album, Brick by Brick. A duet with Kate Pierson of the B-52's, it was the album's second single, in September 1990. [1] It became the biggest mainstream hit of Pop's career, as he reached the top 40 in the United States for the first and only time.
The song appears in the 1999 film The Best Man. The song appears on the radio station Bounce FM in Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas. The song appears in the 2010 film Death at a Funeral. British comedian Javone Prince finishes each episode of The Javone Prince Show with "Candy Time", during which the audience and cast dance to the song.
The song featured a strikingly bubblegum pop and hyperpop sound, contrasting much of Candy's previous hip hop-adjacent outputs, which Candy attributed to "[having] a lot of fun experimenting with new forms of pop music". It was described as the first taster from Candy's second album, which briefly had the working title Freaky Princess. [3]
"I Want Candy" was released as the second single from English singer Melanie C's fourth album This Time, and the first single in the UK, Denmark and Italy, released on 26 March 2007. [47] The song was also the soundtrack to the movie of the same name, and the video featured Melanie dancing for the first time since the Spice Girls.
"Candy" is a song by American rapper and singer Doja Cat for her debut album, Amala (2018). Released on March 23, 2018, as the second single from the album, through Kemosabe and RCA. [3] The song was written by Doja Cat alongside producers Budo & Yeti Beats and additional producer Cambo. [4] "Candy" peaked at number 86 on the Billboard Hot 100 ...
"Candy" is a song by American pop singer Mandy Moore. Serving as Moore's debut single, it was released as the lead single from her first studio album, So Real (1999), on August 17, 1999, by Epic Records and 550 Music .
Parton's version of the song was released as a single in October 1982, reaching number 8 on the U.S. country singles chart in January 1983. [1] In 1998, the song re-entered the country charts and peaked at number 73 based on unsolicited airplay.
"Candy" is based on Candy Darling, a transgender actress and the subject of an earlier song by Lou Reed, "Candy Says". She grew up on Long Island ("the island") and was a regular at "the back room" of Max's Kansas City. [16] [17] "Little Joe" was the nickname of Joe Dallesandro, an actor who starred in Flesh, a 1968 film about a teenage hustler.