Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Jiggle Jiggle" is a 2022 single by British-American journalist and documentary maker Louis Theroux, produced by Manchester-based DJ duo Duke & Jones (Isaac McKelvey and Luke Conibear). The song was created based on a rap trend that Theroux had been involved in, featuring a snippet of him rapping on the "Gangsta Rap" episode of the sho
ID3 is a metadata container most often used in conjunction with the MP3 audio file format. It allows information such as the title, artist, album, track number, and other information about the file to be stored in the file itself.
"Gangsta's Paradise" is a single by American rapper Coolio, released on August 1, 1995 [3] by Tommy Boy, Warner Bros. and MCA. Interpolating Stevie Wonder's song "Pastime Paradise" (1976), "Gangsta's Paradise" features vocals from American singer L.V. who served as a co-composer and co-lyricist with Coolio and Doug Rasheed, with Wonder also being credited for the composition and lyrics.
Gangsta Bitch; Gangsta Nation; Gangsta Rap Made Me Do It; Gangsta Walk; Gangsta's Paradise; Gangstas Don't Live That Long; Gangstas Make the World Go Round; Gangstaz Roll; Get Buck; Get Money; Ghetto Gospel; Ghetto Mindstate (Can't Get Away) GNF (OKOKOK) Go Crazy (Young Jeezy song) Go to Church; Grew Up a Screw Up
Gangsta Boo [36] Geto Boys [37] Freddie Gibbs [38] H. Hard Boyz [39] ... All Music Guide to Hip-hop: The Definitive Guide to Rap & Hip-hop. Backbeat Books.
The song, and The Chronic in general, was released in the context of a moral panic about rap music in which the Parents Music Resource Center's "Parental Advisory" labels became prominent, a court case which deemed 2 Live Crew's As Nasty as They Wanna Be album obscene, the Rodney King riots, a backlash against gangster rap from Harlem preacher ...
"Then Leave" is a song by American rapper and producer BeatKing featuring fellow rapper Queendome Come, released as a single on March 25, 2020, from BeatKing's album Gangsta Stripper Music 4 (2020). [1] In June 2020, the song went viral on video-sharing app TikTok.
Vigilante rap, also known as V-rap or rap das milícias is a musical style developed in Brazil and whose lyrics, as opposed to gangsta rap, are about praising vigilantism and violent acts against criminals instead of criminal enterprise or gangster life.