Опубликовано: 25 окт. 2009 г.Britney Spears' official music video for 'If U Seek Amy'. Click to listen to Britney Spears on Spotify: http://smarturl.it/BritneySpot?IQid=B...
Oh baby baby
Have you seen Amy tonight?
Is she in the bathroom
Is she smokin' up outside
Oh
Oh baby baby
Does she take a piece of lime
For the drink that I'm gonna buy her
Do you know just what she likes
Oh
Oh Oh
Tell me have you seen her
Because I'm so
Oh
I can't get her off of my brain
I just want to go to the party she gonna go
Can somebody take me home
Ha ha he ha ha ho
Love me hate me
Say what you want about me
But all of the boys and all of the girls are
begging to If You Seek Amy
Love me hate me
But can't you see what I see
All of the boys and all of the girls
are begging to If You Seek Amy
«Conga» is the first hit single released by the American band Miami Sound Machine, led by Gloria Estefan, on their second English-language album, and ninth overall, Primitive Love. The song was written by the band's drummer and lead songwriter Enrique Garcia. The single was first released in 1985.
According to Gloria Estefan in an interview in the Netherlands television show RTL Late Night, Conga was written after the band had performed «Dr. Beat» in a club called Cartouche in Utrecht, the Netherlands. The single was released in 1985 and became a worldwide hit, reaching #10 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and winning the Grand Prize at the 15th annual «Tokyo Music Festival» in Japan.
The single was certified Gold by the RIAA in the U.S. for shipments of 500,000 copies.
«Conga» was re-recorded as a new remix in 2001, including samples of «Dr. Beat» and «Rhythm Is Gonna Get You» and was released on Estefan's fourth compilation album. This new song was released as a promo single in Spain and titled «Y-Tu-Conga.»
Dancers
Sven Otten
Excited Puppy Dances in a Latin Style
Mavis Everett
genousse
Klaudia Zygmunt
Ksenia Parkhatskaya
@nataliacq99 Instagram
Rebelindustry
Опубликовано: 12 авг. 2011 г.Blu Cantrell's official music video for 'Breathe'. Click to listen to Blu Cantrell on Spotify: http://smarturl.it/BluCSpotify?IQid=B...
Big up to all the Brooklyn massive crew
Some they pay no mind, but now them notice Blu
So take your ones, your fiftys, put your hundreds to
your shoes
And to my fans you know I love you
To the top we be chargin'
I'm not leavin' till someone stops rockin'
All the soldiers come back and start marchin'
And mi see myself sellin' in black market
You say you love, say you love me
But you're never there for me, yeah, mmm...hmm...
You'll be cryin', slowly dyin'
When I decide to leave, oh, oh
All we do is make up
Then break up
Why don't we wake up
And see
When love hurts
It won't work
Maybe we need some time alone
We need to let it breathe
"«Billie Jean»" was the first short film made for 'Thriller,' the biggest-selling album of all time. The short film for this No. 1 single, directed by Steve Barron, made history as the first video by a black artist to receive heavy rotation on MTV, and was later ranked by the network as one of the 100 greatest music videos of all time.
Written & Composed by Michael Jackson
Produced by Quincy Jones for Quincy Jones Productions
Co-Produced by Michael Jackson for MJJ Productions, Inc.
From the album Thriller, released November 30, 1982
Released as a single January 2, 1983
THE SHORT FILM
Director: Steve Barron
Primary Production Location: Los Angeles, California
Michael Jackson's short film for "«Billie Jean»" was the first of three short films produced for recordings from Thriller, which continues its reign as the biggest selling album of all time with worldwide sales in excess of 105 million as of June 1, 2016 and in December, 2015 became the first ever album to be awarded triple diamond status by the RIAA for US sales alone. The "«Billie Jean»" single reached No. 1 in 10 countries in the spring of 1983, including seven consecutive weeks atop the Billboard Hot 100 — becoming the second-highest selling single in America that same year.
"«Billie Jean»" was certified Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America on April 4, 1983, and Platinum on February 4, 1989. The song won two Grammy Awards for Best R&B Song and Best R&B Performance — Male, as well as an American Music Award for Favorite Single — Pop/Rock and was also named the Single of the Year on The Village Voice Pazz & Jop critics' poll in 1983.
The short film featured a paparazzo attempting to photograph Jackson as he danced through an urban landscape. A specially created set featured steps and sidewalk tiles that lit up underneath Michael's feet. It is here that fans first saw some of Michael's best-known dance moves, such as spinning and landing on his toes. Many of Michael's steps and mannerisms in the video would become forever associated with The King of Pop.
""[W]hen the chorus hit.he sprung into this dance that was unlike anything I'd ever seen,"" director Steve Barron recounted of Jackson's choreography in the video. "«It was just extraordinary, instinctive. He pulled it all together and turned it into what we saw.The camera literally steamed up, the eyepiece steamed up, because of my heat from what I was seeing.»" Barron also recalled the crew breaking into spontaneous applause after Michael finished dancing.
The "«Billie Jean»" short film made history as the first video by a black artist to be played in heavy rotation on MTV, then in its second year. In 1992, the short film was inducted into the Music Video Producers Hall of Fame. MTV ranked "«Billie Jean»" as the 35th greatest music video of all time in 1999, one of three entries of Jackson's on the chart alongside "«Thriller»" and "«Beat It.»"