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A "dance" version of the music video was published on September 11, 2017. [14] Annie Martin of United Press International described the video as a "colorful" video showing Momoland "swoon over" Jae-hwan. [15] The music video and the dance version were included in the DVD of Momoland The Best ~Korean Ver.~ (2018). [16]
"Freeze" is a song by Norwegian record producer and DJ Kygo. It was released as a single through RCA Records on 6 May 2022. The song features vocals from English singer-songwriter and record producer Andrew Jackson, who is not credited as an artist on the song. The song was produced by Kygo, Jackson, and Duck Blackwell.
The titular Southern Freeez is attested to derive from a dance move, "The Freeze," used by clubbers in the "Royalty" club, Southgate in the early 1980s. A then-popular song, "The Groove" by Rodney Franklin, has moments where the band drops out for a bar, and a style of freezing movement at these points took hold. [11]
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
"Freeze" is the third and final single from R&B singer T-Pain from his third album, Thr33 Ringz. The song features fellow singer Chris Brown. The song was released on iTunes on October 10 [1] and was added to T-Pain's MySpace on October 17. A version that features Omarion was originally on the album, but was changed to Chris Brown.
The Lakers signature three-point celebration, which resembles D'Angelo Russell's old "ice in my veins" pose, is an ode to TV's "Freeze, Miami Vice!"
Billboard considered it Madonna's third-best video noting that it "conveys the song's bleak heartbreak perfectly" with Madonna's persona in the video. [76] Steve Murgatroyd, Dan Williams, Steve Hiam, and Anthony Walsham received the MTV Video Music Award for Best Special Effects for "Frozen" at the 1998 MTV Video Music Awards.
The video opens with the first use of the Harlem Shake meme, [3] [6] and started a viral trend of people uploading their own "Harlem Shake" videos to YouTube. [10] Despite its name, the meme does not actually involve participants performing the original Harlem Shake dance, a street and hip hop dance that originated in 1980s Harlem, New York City.