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[8] [9] The song uses a medium tempo, and the instruments include a guitar part described by Allmusic critic Donald Guarisco as "bluesy" and keyboards, plus a horn parts in an interlude as well as in the outro. [8] [9] "Letting Go" has more of a soul music feel than most of the songs on Venus and Mars, which are more pop music oriented. [9]
[2] Music author Vincent Benitez interprets the song's ending on a dominant key rather than the tonic as reflecting the singer's uncertain situation. [2] Robert Rodriguez described "No Words" as being the only song on Band on the Run that came close to being the type of "silly love song" that predominated McCartney's albums of the time. [5]
"Who Dat" is the lead single released from JT Money's debut album, Pimpin' on Wax. It features a verse from rapper Solé . Produced by Christopher "Tricky" Stewart (His first produced single), "Who Dat" became a huge hit, making it to number 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 and to date is JT Money's only solo hit.
The song was performed again at the Concerts for the People of Kampuchea and released on the album and EP of the same name. This was a series of concerts featuring Queen , The Clash , the Pretenders , The Who , Elvis Costello , Wings, and many more artists which took place at the Hammersmith Odeon in London, England during December 1979 to ...
"Who Dat" is a song by the American hip hop recording artist J. Cole. It was released as a single in the United States on May 31, 2010. Despite initially being meant to be the lead single from Cole's first album Cole World: The Sideline Story (2011), "Who Dat" was ultimately cut from the album's standard track listing after underperforming on the charts.
[22] [26] The pre-chorus has a chord progression of Am7–Bm7–Cmaj–D, while the double chorus has a sequence of Em–G6–Dsus2–C–Dsus2–E–G–D–C6–Dsus2–E. [22] Unusually among double choruses in pop music, "Wings" has a key change to E major halfway on the harmonised lyric "fly", sustaining the song's momentum. This is built ...
The song was used with the opening credits of, and as a main melody line through, the 1980 movie Oh!Heavenly Dog, starring Chevy Chase, Jane Seymour and Benji.In 2010, neo-soul artist Erykah Badu sampled "Arrow Through Me" on an album track called "Gone Baby, Don't Be Long" on her CD New Amerykah Part Two (Return of the Ankh).
The music video is unlike a normal Young Jeezy video due to most of it being shot from a green screen. It also features a female dance crew and colorful backgrounds.