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Dre performs the chorus and DJ Khaled performs the intro and outro, but neither of the two are credited. The song discusses what Birdman believes is a major accomplishment: spending 100 million dollars. The song reached number sixty-nine on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart, [1] and number eighteen on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart. [2]
The video also features the band performing the song on an oversized Monopoly-style game board with the words "Big Money" in the middle. A full-length version of the video was included on the VHS and laserdisc releases of Rush's Grace Under Pressure tour concert film, while an edited version was released to MTV and other outlets, as well as on ...
The song was performed on the 2006 MTV Video Music Awards and later won Best Rap Song at the 49th Grammy Awards. American R&B singer, Amerie , recorded an answer back (remix) to the single. The song was included on her first mixtape, Because I Love It Volume 1 (the mixtape that was released to accompany her third studio album Because I Love It ) .
One-hit wonders are responsible for some of the most iconic songs in music history. Some artists made it to the top of the charts by accident, but it's a mystery why others with serious talent ...
"Dinero" (English: "Money") is a song by American singer Jennifer Lopez featuring American record producer DJ Khaled and American rapper Cardi B. It was written by Charles Anderson, Tommy Brown, Mohombi Moupondo , Alexander Prado, Jermaine Denny , DJ Khaled, Cardi B and Luis Kalaff, and produced by DJ Khaled and Tommy Brown.
The song was released two weeks later on March 26. Although this is the first official collaboration between the artists, it is not Internet Money's first run-in with either artist. Mosey had previously featured on "Lost Me" alongside fellow American rappers Iann Dior and Lil Skies in 2020, a song from Internet Money's debut studio album B4 the ...
The video for the 1985 Dire Straits song "Money for Nothing" made pioneering use of computer animation, and helped make the song an international hit. The song itself was a wry comment on the music-video phenomenon, sung from the point of view of an appliance deliveryman both drawn to and repelled by the outlandish images and personalities that ...
Producer Swizz Beatz stated that the glissando sounds were made by him sliding his hand across a keyboard, originally as a joke. [2] The remix version is featured on the soundtrack to the movie The Corruptor. The music video for the remix version of the track is intertwined with clips from The Corruptor as well.