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"Shut Up and Dance" is a pop rock, [13] power pop, [14] synth rock, [15] and alternative rock song [19] that is driven by synthesizer and dance grooves. [13] It incorporates production that is reminiscent of the 1980s, with gated ambience added to the drums, sheeny synth pads, reversed snare 'whooshes', and stadium-sized reverb and delay effects. [20]
In 2000, Big Oomp signed Unk to his label, Big Oomp Records. He released the album Beat'n Down Yo Block! in 2006 led by the single "Walk It Out" that reached Billboard Hot 100 top 10. [2] In 2008 he released the album 2econd Season supported by the single "Show Out" to moderate success. [3]
"Walk It Out" is the debut single of rapper Unk from his debut album Beat'n Down Yo Block! The song was played on the radio in Atlanta starting in March 2006 but did not gain popularity nationwide until September of that year. The song peaked at number 10 on the Billboard Hot 100, giving him the first top-ten single of his career.
On November 26, 2008, an official remix was released with the song featuring Soulja Boy Tell 'Em, Sean Kingston, Jim Jones, and E-40. [1] Jim Jones has appeared on the remixes to "Walk It Out" and "2 Step," the latter of which E-40 was also featured on. It is also available on DJ Envy's mixtape, "Codeine Overdose 2"
Walk It Out may refer to: Songs "Walk It Out" (Unk song), 2006 "Walk It Out" (Jennifer Hudson song), 2014 This page was last edited on 30 ...
The King Steps Out; Klondike Annie; One in a Million; Pennies from Heaven; Pigskin Parade; The Pinch Singer (short) Poor Little Rich Girl; Rhythm on the Range; Rose of the Rancho; Rose Marie; San Francisco; Show Boat; Sing, Baby, Sing; Sing Me a Love Song; The Singing Kid; Sitting on the Moon; Song and Dance Man; Stage Struck; Stars on Parade ...
The chorus of the song, "You could blow with this, or you could blow with that", is a homage to the Black Sheep song "The Choice Is Yours (Revisited)", which has a similar chorus. The lines "Walk without rhythm/and it won't attract the worm " quote the science fiction novel Dune , while the line "tone of my voice" may be the titular weapon, as ...
The first dance sequence in the film presents Alex at her nighttime gig performing a dance routine that involves having water splash down onto the stage, and Ramone saw how that particular song, in which Sinnamon contributes some growling and moaning to her first-person account of being approached by an attractive man in a bar, was a good fit ...