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"Bust It Baby" is a single by American rapper Plies released on January 25, 2008, and is the first single from Plies' second album, Definition of Real. The original was featured as a bonus track on Definition of Real , while "Bust It Baby Pt. 2", which features R&B singer Ne-Yo , is an official track on the album.
Plies was born Algernod Lanier Washington in Fort Myers, Florida, and grew up in the East Dunbar area of Fort Myers. [2] While at Fort Myers Senior High School, he played receiver and defensive back in its football team, was crowned Homecoming King, was the valedictorian of his high school class, and was named the "Best Dressed" student of his class.
List of music videos as featured artist, with directors, showing year released Title Year Director(s) "Back Like That" (Ghostface Killah featuring Ne-Yo) 2006 Ray Kay [117] "Minority Report" (Jay-Z featuring Ne-Yo) 2007 Jay-Z "Make Me Better" (Fabolous featuring Ne-Yo) Erik White [117] "Hate That I Love You" (Rihanna featuring Ne-Yo) Anthony ...
"Buss It" is a dirty rap [1] song, which begins with a sample from American rapper Nelly's 2002 song "Hot in Herre" in which Nelly sings, "Checkin' your reflection and tellin' your best friend/Like, 'Girl, I think my butt gettin' big'", [2] which then transitions into the song's "trap-heavy" chorus over a repetition of the sample. [3]
"Bust a Move" is a song by British-American rapper Young MC from his 1989 debut album, Stone Cold Rhymin'. The song is built on a sample of "Found a Child" by the group Ballin' Jack . The drums, produced by a LinnDrum , are sampled from the song "Radio-Activity" by RoyalCash.
Latinos Define Their Identity In Stunning Photo Essay
The video was released on July 23, 2008. It premiered as the "New Joint of the Day" on BET's 106 & Park.The video can now be seen on MySpace and YouTube.The video is about a man expressing how when he is alone with his lover, his hands have a mind of their own, and he does not intend disrespect to her.
Don't rely on bloviating pundits to tell you who'll prevail on Hollywood's big night. The Huffington Post crunched the stats on every Oscar nominee of the past 30 years to produce a scientific metric for predicting the winners at the 2013 Academy Awards.