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Here's your go-to list of the best running music to listen to when you work out, from pop to rap to indie. Skip to main content. Sign in. Mail. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800 ...
Nimble, sparse and blunt, every word serves the song's plot. It's hard to make a chorus that contains a tongue twister like, '151 rum and a blunt, young nigga numb, numb, numb and he got a little gun / A little bitty killer really doin' it for fun, give him a little bit and he'll get a nigga done' work musically and technically.
The crowd of people start to make intense movements before running off the bus in time with when Corey Taylor's vocals hit. The crowd runs into a warehouse where they meet several black-hooded figures and bow down to them, as if being instructed. They all stand up and raise their hands in unison as the song's bridge hits.
"You're Going Down" is the lead single from Sick Puppies' third album Tri-Polar. "You're Going Down" was used by WWE to represent their Extreme Rules pay-per-view event as its official theme song. [1]
Rock My Run (stylized as RockMyRun; trademarked slogan: "The Best Running Music in the World™") is a mobile running/fitness app [2] founded in 2011 that provides running and workout music in the form of DJ mixes. [3] It is owned by Rock My World, Inc., [1] a health and fitness technology company based in San Diego, California.
Hi-NRG songs by non-hi NRG artists are also included. Contents Artists • Songs (1970s • Early 1980s • Mid- to late 1980s • 1990s • 2000s • 2000s) ...
The music video for this song shows Airbourne in the back of a truck playing while being chased by the LAPD.It also features a guest appearance by Lemmy Kilmister of Motörhead as the driver of the truck, eventually locking the pursuing policemen inside the truck (whilst wearing a Motörhead jacket) after it has stopped and the band has left it.
"Silent Running" was one of the first songs to emerge from the Rutherford/Robertson songwriting partnership. It was among a series of songs that the pair wrote in order to test the results of their collaboration. When producer Christopher Neil heard the song on a demo tape that Rutherford played, he recommended that it be used for the album. [9]