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"Uptown Funk" is a song by British record producer Mark Ronson featuring American singer Bruno Mars. It was released on 10 November 2014, as the lead single from Ronson's fourth studio album, Uptown Special (2015).
"Downtown" is a song by American hip hop duo Macklemore & Ryan Lewis featuring fellow American musicians Eric Nally of Foxy Shazam, Melle Mel, Kool Moe Dee, and Grandmaster Caz. The song was officially released on August 27, 2015, as the lead single from the duo's second studio album This Unruly Mess I've Made (2016).
"Downtown" also made Clark the first UK female artist to have a single certified as a Gold record for US sales of one million units. On Billboard's annual Disk Jockey poll, "Downtown" was voted the second best single release of 1965 and Petula Clark was voted third most popular female vocalist. [14] "Downtown" would be the first of fifteen ...
"The 42nd Street and Broadway Strut" music by Albert Von Tilzer; lyrics by Neville Fleeson "42nd Street Dub" by Prince Jammy "42nd Street Dub" by Renegade Soundwave "42nd Street Psycho Blues" by Janis Ian "44th Street Suite" by McCoy Tyner "45 Minutes from Broadway" by George M. Cohan "45th Street At 8th Avenue" by Isao Suzuki Quartet
Cameo is an American funk band that formed in 1974. [1] Cameo was initially a 14-member group known as the New York City Players; [1] this name was later changed to Cameo.. As of the first half of 2009, some of the original members continued to perform together.
The single became a No. 1 hit in Paraguay and charted within the top ten of several countries, including Bolivia, Colombia, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, Honduras, Portugal, Uruguay, and Spain; peaking at No. 7 in Portugal, "Downtown" became J Balvin's second most-successful song in the country, at the time, just behind his worldwide hit ...
The lyrics are prophetic. "I've lived uptown. I've lived downtown, but I've never been so broke that I couldn't leave town." He'd lived on the beach and in the hills. He'd had money and been broke. He'd had his L.A. adventure, and he was out. [10] Musically, "The Changeling" blends blues rock [1] and funk music elements. [11]
"Talkin' Out the Side of Your Neck" features elements of hip hop and funk music. Daryl Easlea, writing for BBC Music, described the song as "an attack on the Reagan government [...] rocking a metal groove, full of sassy uptown horns with Talking Heads-style keyboard washes". [5]