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"Bottoms Up" is a song recorded by American country rock singer Brantley Gilbert. It is the first single from his third studio album Just as I Am, and was released on December 16, 2013. [1] [2] The song was written by Gilbert, Justin Weaver and Brett James. A remix featuring Atlanta-based rapper T.I., was included on the reissue of Just as I Am ...
The music video was directed by Anthony Mandler [2] and filmed on July 31, 2010. [12] A sneak peek to the music video was released August 16, 2010. [13] The video provides dark, carnival-esque visuals to this club record. Trey commented on the music video in an interview with MTV stating, “‘Bottoms Up,’ I feel, is a very creative video ...
Jock Jams, Volume 1 is the first album in the Jock Jams compilation album series, released in July 1995.. Two years after this album was released, "Jock Jam Megamix" was released, containing songs from this album and the next two.
(There It Is)" and the members of Tag Team as the punchline to a joke in a commercial. It featured Glenn and Gibson replacing the lyrics of the song with lyrics about ice cream, turning the lyric to "Scoop! (There It Is)". While the song had been used in advertisements previously, this was the first time the members appeared in a spot. [69] [70]
The song was first revealed in a snippet posted on Instagram on September 2, 2018, in which the Boyboy West Coast lip syncs the first verse of the then-unnamed song as it is playing in the background, [2] [3] [5] while dressed in black, wearing jewelry, sunglasses on his head, and a bandana around his neck [2] [4] and also pretending to drink lean from a styrofoam cup.
A similar song, "Whoot, There It Is", was released by the Miami-based group 95 South a month prior to Tag Team's "Whoomp!" [ 13 ] Both groups' record companies maintained that the similarities were a coincidence, as the phrase "Whoomp (or whoot), there it is" was a common expression used by dancers in Atlanta and Miami nightclubs where members ...
The rites and rituals of the raunchy high-school comedy can be as prescribed as a class syllabus. But what makes Emma Seligman's “Bottoms” such an anarchic thrill is how much it couldn't care ...
The song was made free for listening on the band's official website on September 22, 2011 and was released as an official single on September 26. [2] It was made available for download on September 27. The official lyric video for "Bottoms Up" was released on YouTube on November 17.