Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Cupid Shuffle" is a song by Cupid from his 2007 studio album Time for a Change. It has spawned a popular line dance and has drawn comparisons to DJ Casper's "Cha Cha Slide". In the United States, the song peaked at number 66 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 21 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs the chart, both in the August 18, 2007 issue.
Pages in category "American hip-hop songs" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 220 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
"Beat Bop" is a song by American hip-hop artists Rammellzee and K-Rob. It was produced and arranged by Jean-Michel Basquiat. Initially, it was made as a test pressing by Tartown Inc. in 1983. That same year, the song was released as a single by Profile Records, and featured in the hip-hop documentary film Style Wars (1983). [1]
"Rapper's Delight" peaked at number 36 in January 1980 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart, [15] number four on the Billboard Hot Soul Singles chart in December 1979. The song was much more successful internationally, reaching number one on the Canadian Top Singles chart in January 1980, [16] number one on the Dutch Top 40, and number three on the UK Singles Chart.
Intercut throughout the video are scenes of B.I.G. and Diddy behind a sepia background with female dancers and B.I.G. dancing behind a black background while pieces of the chorus are captioned below. "For a big guy, he could really dance, but because his leg was still messed up [from a car accident that shattered his thighbone] he had to stay ...
A few hip-hop dance shows appeared on television in the 1990s such as 1991's The Party Machine with Nia Peeples [note 9] and 1992's The Grind. Several hip-hop dance shows premiered in the 2000s including (but not limited to) Dance Fever, Dance 360, The Wade Robson Project, MTV Dance Crew, America's Best Dance Crew, Dance on Sunset, and Shake It Up.
The Daily Telegraph ranked "Hold On" number 47 in their "Top 50 Dance Songs" list in 2015, adding: "R&B girl group En Vogue broke through with this club classic. A sharp acapella rendition of Motown standard Who's Lovin You leads into a hip-hop beat with a funky bass line, horn and piano sounds. "You've got to hold on, to your love", the girls ...
The song is a tribute to South Central Los Angeles party culture in the hip hop soul style popular at the time. [ 2 ] [ 4 ] It features Jordan singing over an enhanced Teddy Riley drumbeat sample of Slick Rick 's " Children's Story " which in turn has an added interpolation of the bass of Bob James ' " Nautilus ". [ 3 ] "