Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"So What" is the first single from Field Mob's third album, Light Poles and Pine Trees, featuring multi-platinum recording artist Ciara, who performs the chorus and the bridge. The single peaked at #10 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart making it Field Mob's first Top 10 single and Ciara's sixth.
Field is a reference not only to the neighborhood where they grew up, but also an allusion to a slang term for the southern United States. Mob signifies the strength the duo represents: "We're two people but together we make an army. We're making a strong statement with two people.
From tha Roota to tha Toota is the second album from the hip hop duo Field Mob released under Interscope Records.It was released to stores on October 22, 2002. [3] The title of the album is a colloquial southern United States reference to making use of an entire pig - from the snout to the tail. [4]
613: Ashy to Classy is the first studio album by the American hip hop duo Field Mob, released in 2000 by MCA Records. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] Supported by the only single, "Project Dreamz", it peaked at No. 194 on the Billboard 200 and No. 35 on the Top R&B/Hip Hop Albums charts.
Light Poles and Pine Trees is the third studio album by American Southern hip hop duo Field Mob.It was released on June 20, 2006 through Disturbing tha Peace, Geffen Records and Interscope Records.
So it was just this absolute pit of shame," Field said. "And then, when it was finished, they said, 'Go go go go go!', like the building was on fire. And they didn't want me there, you know, it ...
The 13-member committee is made up of a variety of members from various parts of college football. Nearly half of the group is active athletic directors, one each from the Power Four conferences ...
"Sick of Being Lonely" is a song written [3] and performed by American hip hop group Field Mob featuring Torica. It was issued as the official lead single from their second studio album From tha Roota to tha Toota. It was the group's first entry on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at #18 in 2002. [5]