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The song contains excerpts from Hamilton Bohannon's 1973 track "Singing a Song for My Mother", hence Bohannon is also credited as a songwriter. "Ooh!" was released as the second single from Love & Life on August 25, 2003, by Geffen Records. A moderate commercial success, "Ooh!" peaked at number 29 on the US Billboard Hot 100.
"Ooh, Ooh Baby" is the debut single by American R&B singer Taral Hicks. The song features a guest appearance by then–unknown Missy "Misdemeanor" Elliott, who was at the time an ex-member of DeVante Swing's act Sista. The song was released on June 18, 1996, as the first single from Hicks' debut album, This Time (1997). [1]
"Baby-Baby-Baby" is a song by American girl group TLC. It was the second single released from their debut studio album, Ooooooohhh... On the TLC Tip (1992), and their second consecutive top-10 hit.
The song was used in season 3, episode 1 of Sex Education. [29] It also forms the soundtrack to a one-minute McDonalds advert in 2023 directed by Edgar Wright. [30] The song is used as the notorious license test fail music for the 2005 PlayStation 2 game Gran Turismo 4. [31] The song is used in a 2024 commercial for Meibo eye drops.
For the first time as a solo artist, Harrison undertook promotion for his album, [4] [55] in the UK, which included a song-by-song discussion with BBC Radio 1 DJ Paul Gambaccini. [56] When discussing "Ooh Baby", Harrison said that he was "not anywhere in [Robinson]'s league" as a singer, but the song "always reminds me of that Smokey type of mood".
"Never Leave You (Uh Ooh, Uh Ooh)" is an R&B song written by Lumidee Cedeño, Teddy "Tedsmooth" Mendez and Eddie Perez, and features a prominent dancehall reggae riddim called "Diwali" written by Steven "Lenky" Marsden, [2] [3] although it is slightly altered from the original riddim.
"Ooh", a song by Scissor Sisters (2006) "Oooh", a song by Caravan Palace from Caravan Palace (2008) Other uses.
In a 2020 review, Can't Stop the Pop described it as a "rollicking tour-de-force" and "relentless, dizzying rush from start to finish". They stated that "the timing of 'Ooh Aah…Just A Little Bit' was perfect; it bottled the Eurodance sound of the early '90s and siphoned it down into a traditionally structured pop song." [28]