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"Do Anything" debuted on the US Billboard Hot 100 at number 58, becoming the Hot Shot Debut of August 10, 1991. [6] Ten issues later, the song reached its peak of number two. [ 7 ] It spent its final week on the Hot 100 at number 27 on December 28, 1991, spending a total of 21 weeks on the listing. [ 8 ]
The song sat unfinished until Erickson began working on it again in 1989. The rap was originally recorded by Ingrid Chavez , a friend of the duo who improvised the rap in the studio. In 1990, the version with Chavez doing the raps was a local hit on Minnesota's WLOL-FM , where Erickson worked as a remix engineer.
It is helpful, I think, to simply forget about the missing songs, and recognize that I'll Do Anything is a complete movie without them - smart, original, subversive." [2] Janet Maslin of The New York Times described it as "droll" and "improbably buoyant." [3] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade "B−" on scale of A to F. [4]
Since 2009 the song has been the name and title of Rich Russo's free form radio show Anything Anything with Rich Russo where the song opens the show each week. [4] The song also features in the 2014 film Two Night Stand, as well as the 2003 film 11:14. American talk show host Ellen DeGeneres has said it is her favorite song.
25th Anniversary 10-Movie Collection: Includes Jonah: A VeggieTales Movie, The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything: A VeggieTales Movie, A Snoodle's Tale, Lyle the Kindly Viking, Pistachio - The Little Boy That Woodn't, Sweetpea Beauty, Sumo of the Opera, Sheerluck Holmes and the Golden Ruler, Robin Good and His Not So Merry Men and The Penniless ...
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"Anything" is a song by rapper Jay-Z that is found on Beanie Sigel's 2000 album The Truth. It is produced by Sam Sneed and P. Skam, who sample Lionel Bart 's "I'd Do Anything" for the track's beat and chorus.
"I'd Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That)" is a song written by Jim Steinman, and recorded by American rock singer Meat Loaf featuring Lorraine Crosby. The song was released in August 1993 by MCA and Virgin as the first single from the singer's sixth album, Bat Out of Hell II: Back into Hell (1993).