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100 gecs referenced the song in the line "la di da di da di, all I wanna do is party" in their song "757" from the 2023 album 10,000 gecs. In 2024, "La Di Da Di" was selected for preservation in the United States National Recording Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". [11]
The tracklist was released on September 11, revealing four tracks: lead single "La Di Da", "Untouchable", "Gxxd Boy" and "No Good Reason"; the lyrics for "La Di Da" were co-written by member E:U. [7] The music video teaser for "La Di Da" was released on September 16, [8] and the music video on September 21. [9]
"La Di Da" is a retro-inspired uptempo electropop song that combines various elements from the '80s, such as cheerleader chants and strong synthesizers. [6] The lyrics have a strong sense of self-empowerment and sends a humbling message to the "bad guys" and the "players" (haters). [7]
Many of these songs based on Slick Rick samples went on to become hit singles. He was one of the first hip-hop artists to be covered, when Snoop Dogg (then Snoop Doggy Dogg) rapped Rick's lyrics from his record "La Di Da Di" almost in their entirety on the track "Lodi Dodi" on his debut album Doggystyle in 1993. At the time, it was uncommon for ...
They also recorded "La Di Da Di", a tune that was completely voiced by MC Ricky D and backed by Doug E. Fresh's beatboxing for the entire duration of the song. The release of these two songs as a 12" single launched Doug E. Fresh (and Slick Rick) into stardom.
"Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da" was released on The Beatles on 22 November 1968. [43] [44] As one of the most popular tracks on the album, it was also issued as a single, backed by "While My Guitar Gently Weeps", [45] in many countries, although not in the main commercial markets of the UK and the United States. [46]
"My Heart Goes (La Di Da)" is a song by British singer-songwriter Becky Hill and German DJ Topic. It was released on 24 August 2021 as the fifth single from Hill's debut studio album Only Honest on the Weekend. [1] The song peaked at number 11 on the UK Singles Chart where it spent four consecutive weeks and became the album's fourth top-20 hit ...
But 'La Di Da' is already making an impression, and it's indicative of the midpace, happy/sad ambivalence the band specialises in." "It's also good to see vocalist Paul Young, the band's chief lyricist, being able to vary the content of his lyrics, and providing a contrast to the usual love-gone-right and love-gone-wrong fodder". [4]