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"Wobble" finally made its debut on the US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart at number 89 on June 2, 2011, almost three years after its release, and has since peaked at number 77. It went on to debut at number 94 on the US Billboard Hot 100 on January 7, 2012. In 2020, the song made a resurgence after trending on the video sharing platform TikTok.
"Wiggle Wobble" is an instrumental written by Les Cooper and performed by Cooper & the Soul Rockers. The single was produced by Bobby and Danny Robinson. [ 1 ] It was featured on their 1963 album Wiggle Wobble Dance Party .
"Playhouse Disney Theme" (both generic and character versions) - Playhouse Disney 2 "Poesje Mauw" – Here Comes a Song "Polly Put the Kettle On" – Racing to the Rainbow "Ponies" – Yummy Yummy "Porcupine Pie" – It's a Wiggly Wiggly World "The Princess of the Sea" – Racing to the Rainbow "Pufferbillies" – Big Red Car
"Wobble" (song), a single by V.I.C. "Wobble", a song by Flo Rida from his 2015 EP My House; Wobble, an album by Black Market Karma; Wobbles (equine disorder), a disorder of the nervous system in dogs and horses; Wobble base pair, a type of base pairing in genetics; Chandler wobble, short-term periodic change in Earth's axial tilt
The style and image of Wobble Jaggle Jiggle was based heavily on 1960s psychedelia and heavy drug references. The band's name was taken from Chambers' description of a drug experience, and many of his lyrics alluded to counter-culture lifestyle of "getting stoned and wearing groovy clothes". [ 1 ]
"Wobble Wobble" is the debut single by 504 Boyz, released in 2000 from their debut studio album, Goodfellas. The song was produced by Beats by the Pound member Carlos Stephens and featured seven members of the group, Master P, C-Murder, Silkk the Shocker, Mac, Magic, Krazy and Mystikal.
The Tonight Show host, who was an SNL cast member from 1998 to 2004, says it was immediately clear that the sketch would be a hit. "It was so surreal and bizarre, but you could feel in the air ...
The catchphrase "Weebles wobble, but they don't fall down" was used in advertising during their rise in popularity in the 1970s and during successive relaunches in the early 2000s. The line was coined by advertising executive J. Mitchell Reed in his Madison Ave Office.