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"Skipping a Beat" is a song recorded by American recording artist Jordin Sparks. The mid tempo R&B/pop track was written by Cainon Lamb, Rebecca Johnson & Taurian Osbourne, while the song's production was provided by Lamb. "Skipping a Beat" premiered online via Sparks' official SoundCloud page on August 1, 2013.
The song has been covered by many artists. Among the more notable is Modern Rocketry's version in 1983, which reached number 7 on the U.S. Hot Dance/Disco chart, and PJ & Duncan's version in 1996, which reached number 11 on the UK Singles Chart.
Skipping rhymes need not always have to be rhymes, however. They can be games, such as a game called, "School." In "Kindergarten" (the first round), all skippers must run through rope without skipping. In "First Grade", all skippers must skip in, skip once, and skip out without getting caught in the rope, and so on.
The school year has never looked more challenging, with Zoom lessons and all, but we still need 15 believable excuses for skipping class in middle school! Students are students, at home or in ...
"The Class" is a 1959 novelty song by American rock and roll recording artist Chubby Checker. It peaked at number thirty-eight on the Billboard Hot 100 and was his first entry on the chart. [ 3 ] In the song, Checker plays a music teacher who asks his class (Checker doing impressions of various musicians) for their homework, which are ...
Two versions of the song exist: a 2:12 minute, radio-friendly length, “Disc Jockey Version"; and a longer, 6:30 “School Version”, for use in educational institution gymnasiums. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The latter included 11 floor exercises for school children designed by Bud Wilkinson , the head coach of the University of Oklahoma football team. [ 3 ]
Keep Calm and Carry the Monkey is the second album by Australian rock band Skipping Girl Vinegar. The first single from the album, "One Long Week", was released in March 2011. This heralded a harder and more dynamic sound. [1] The song was playlisted by Triple J and other Australian radio stations. [2] The album was released two months later.
"Skip a Rope" is a song written by Jack Moran and Glenn Douglas Tubb and recorded by American country music artist Henson Cargill, released in November 1967 as the first single and title track from the album Skip a Rope. The song was Cargill's debut release on the country chart and his most successful single.