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[72] [73] [74] The music video is the fastest in YouTube history to cross the 200 million mark, in just four days and twelve hours after release, [75] [76] and the fastest by a music group to surpass 400 million views, doing so on September 26, 35 days after release. [77]
"Dynamite" is written in the key of E major, with a tempo of 120 beats per minute. [3] According to Cruz, "The song 'Dynamite' itself is about when you go to the club and when you go to a party and when you're just going out... you got to feel like, 'I'm just gonna explode.'" [1] Dr. Luke and Max Martin had written the melody, and asked Bonnie McKee to write lyrics.
"Dynamite" is a song recorded by American R&B singer Jermaine Jackson. It was released as the first single from his 1984 album, Jermaine Jackson. [4] An instrumental version of the song, "Tell Me I'm Not Dreamin' (Too Good to Be True)", was released as the B-side. [3] It was a #15 hit for him on the Billboard Hot 100 pop charts that year.
Jermaine Jackson (released internationally as Dynamite) is the tenth studio album by United States singer-songwriter Jermaine Jackson, released in 1984. It was his debut album with Arista after leaving Motown .
All three reached the top ten in South Korea and achieved first place on the World Digital Songs chart. "DNA" peaked at 67 on the US Hot 100 . A remix of "MIC Drop" by American DJ Steve Aoki and rapper Desiigner was released in November 2017, reaching the top 40 of the Hot 100 and becoming the first song by a Korean boy group to be certified ...
When Paul sent Sia a working version of "Dynamite", she told him that "he had another hit on his hands". [5] Sean Paul announced the release of "Dynamite" via his social media accounts on 16 October 2021 [6] and it was released shortly after on 22 October. [7]
The song was played in commercials for the 2004 film Napoleon Dynamite. The song appears on the soundtrack and the intro to the 2002 skateboarding video game Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 4. [16] After the September 11 attacks, the song was included on a widely circulated Clear Channel employee's list of potentially upsetting songs. [17]
Dynamite is the third and last collaborative album between labelmates The Supremes and The Four Tops, released on the Motown label in 1971. In the US, Dynamite peaked at the lower hundreds of the Billboard Top 200. The album fared better on the Billboard R&B charts, peaking at 21. It includes several covers of previous hits and a few Motown ...