Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
This article lists songs of the C vs D "mash-up" genre that are commercially available (as opposed to amateur bootlegs and remixes).As a rule, they combine the vocals of the first "component" song with the instrumental (plus additional vocals, on occasion) from the second.
The song has appeared in episodes of the tv shows Power Book III: Raising Kanan, [14] [15] Fresh Off the Boat, [15] [16] Surviving Jack [15] and You. [15] The song appears in the video games Aggressive Inline, [17] NBA Street Vol. 2, [18] and True Crime: New York City. [19] The original mix is featured in Major League Baseball 2K10. [20]
In the modern music industry, a mixtape is a musical project, typically with looser constraints than that of an album or extended play.Unlike the traditional album or extended play, mixtapes are labeled as laid-back projects that allow artists more creative freedom and less commercial pressure. [2]
A mashup (also mesh, mash up, mash-up, blend, bastard pop [1] or bootleg [2]) is a creative work, usually a song, created by blending two or more pre-recorded songs, typically by superimposing the vocal track of one song seamlessly over the instrumental track of another and changing the tempo and key where necessary. [3]
The Native Tongues was a collective of late 1980s and early 1990s hip-hop artists known for their positive-minded, good-natured Afrocentric lyrics, and for pioneering the use of eclectic sampling and jazz-influenced beats. Its principal members were the Jungle Brothers, De La Soul, A Tribe Called Quest, Monie Love, and Queen Latifah
Black Sheep is an American hip hop duo from Queens, New York, United States, composed of Andres "Dres" Vargas Titus and William "Mista Lawnge" McLean. [2] The duo was from New York but met as teenagers in Sanford, North Carolina, where both of their families relocated. [3]
Aadhi Bhagavan is the soundtrack to the 2012 film Ameerin Aadhi-Bhagavan directed by Ameer, starring Jayam Ravi and Neetu Chandra and produced by DMK politician J. Anbazhagan The soundtrack to the film features six songs composed by Yuvan Shankar Raja and lyrics written by Snehan, Arivumathi, Manoj and Rajeev ThaProphecy.
[39] [40] Hip hop scholar Michael Eric Dyson stated, "during the golden age of hip hop, from 1987 to 1993, Afrocentric and black nationalist rap were prominent", [41] and critic Scott Thill described the time as "the golden age of hip hop, the late '80s and early '90s when the form most capably fused the militancy of its Black Panther and Watts ...