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However, as the band and their concept of funk grew, the organization became entangled in internal dissension, legal disputes, and creative exhaustion. [1] "Atomic Dog" was the P-Funk collective's last single to reach #1 on the U.S. R&B chart. According to Clinton, most of the song's lyrics were ad-libbed during the recording process. [2]
"Fuck tha Police" samples "The Boogie Back" by Roy Ayers Ubiquity (written by Harry Whitaker). "Express Yourself" samples "Express Yourself" by Charles Wright & the Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band (written by Wright). [5] "The Nigga Ya Love to Hate" samples "Atomic Dog" by George Clinton (written by Clinton, Garry Shider, and David Spradley). [5]
"Bow Wow Wow" is the debut single by American hip hop group Funkdoobiest, released in 1992. It is the lead single from their debut studio album Which Doobie U B? (1993) and the group's most successful song.
"Atomic Dog" still sounds like the future, but in 1982, Clinton could've never envisioned that the improvised electro song would be a Michael Jackson-dethroning hit.
"Atomic" By Blondie (1980) "Atomic Dog" By George Clinton and the P-Funk All-Stars (1982) "Atomic Playboys" By Steve Stevens (1989) "Back to Zero" By The Rolling Stones (1986) "Beat Street" By Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five (1984) "Beneath the Remains" By Sepultura (1989) "Between the Wheels" By Rush (1984) "Beyond the Black" By Metal ...
In "Dre Day" and in its music video, which accuse Eazy of cheating N.W.A's artists, Dre and Snoop degrade and menace him. Also included are disses retorting earlier disses on songs by Miami rapper Luke Campbell, by New York rapper Tim Dog, and by onetime N.W.A. member Ice Cube, although Dre, while still an N.W.A member, had helped diss Cube ...
"Hoc N Pucky" contains a sample of "T.T.T. (Twelve Tone Tune)" by Bill Evans. "Beej N Dem" contains samples of "Atomic Dog" by George Clinton and "Friday The 13th" by Gil Evans. "Forth & Back (Rock Music)" contains samples of "Funkin 4 Jamaica" by Tom Browne, "I Thought It Was You" by Herbie Hancock & "Love Poem" by Tom Scott and The L.A. Express.
Nobody is singing the former president's praises over his terrible debate performance, but some people are turning his words into song. Trump's 'They're Eating The Dogs' Lie Sounds So Much Better ...