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Hard to say what's on that shirt, but glad to hear it's a Kidz Bop fave. 1. On "G.D.F.R.," the line "Your girl just kissed a girl/I do bi chicks" changes to "Your girl just danced a twirl, I do ...
"Uptown Funk" is a song by British record producer Mark Ronson featuring American singer Bruno Mars. It was released on 10 November 2014, as the lead single from Ronson's fourth studio album, Uptown Special (2015). "Uptown Funk" was written by Ronson, Mars, Jeff Bhasker, and Philip Lawrence; it was produced by the aforementioned first three ...
Mark Daniel Ronson (born 4 September 1975) is a British-American musician, DJ, record producer, songwriter, and remixer. He has won eight Grammy Awards, including Producer of the Year for Amy Winehouse's album Back to Black (2006), as well as two for Record of the Year with her 2006 single "Rehab" and his own 2014 single "Uptown Funk" (featuring Bruno Mars).
Kidz Bop is an American children's music group that produces family-friendly covers of pop songs and related media. Kidz Bop releases compilation albums that feature children covering songs that chart high on the Billboard Hot 100 and/or receive heavy airplay from contemporary hit radio stations several months ahead of each album's release.
Watch These Seniors Perform "Uptown Funk" Six13 changed all of the lyrics to fit the holiday. The hook in the original song is, "Girls hit your hallelujah," while the parody altered the line to ...
It was released on February 3, 2015. It features 21 tracks including the Billboard Hot 100 number-one hit "Uptown Funk". Now 53 debuted at number 2 on the Billboard 200 chart with 99,000 copies sold in its first week. [1] As of July 2015, the compilation has sold 451,000 copies. [2]
And now, Billboard just announced that Bruno Mars’s “Uptown Funk” has claimed the second spot on the list of Top Hot 100 Songs of the 21st Century. Bryan Steffy/Getty Images.
In 2013, KIDZ BOP covered the song as part of their 24th album. The cover changes much of the original lines, in order to make it appropriate for children to listen to. [34] A parody was part of a Pessach Shop Passover Jam, done for the Jewish holiday of Passover by the a cappella group Six13. [35]