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The English version was first released in the United States on 24 September 1983. This version reached No. 1 in Canada, No. 4 in South Africa and peaked at No. 14 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart the week of 24 December 1983. [5] The English-language version of the song also reached No. 2 on the US Dance chart.
"4, 3, 2, 1" is a song by Queens rapper LL Cool J featuring Method Man & Redman, Canibus and DMX from LL Cool J's seventh album Phenomenon as the second single. It was released on December 9, 1997, for Def Jam Recordings and was produced by Erick Sermon .
US [20] Certification Label 1973: Twice Removed from Yesterday – – – 106 Chrysalis: 1974: Bridge of Sighs – 41 3: 7 US: Gold [21] Chrysalis 1975: For Earth Below: 26: 47 9: 5 US: Gold [21] Chrysalis 1976: Long Misty Days: 31: 63 75: 24 US: Gold [21] Chrysalis 1977: In City Dreams: 58 – 27: 25 US: Gold [21] Chrysalis 1978: Caravan to ...
The stop-motion-style video for "4, 3, 2, 1" features k-os and his crew in a closed mall at night, break dancing and playing hockey, among other activities.. The video starts with a shot of two aisles running side by side, then goes to k-os and his crew dancing as they head into the mall. k-os walks around an aisle dressed as a janitor and mops the floor beside a tall mannequin in a suit, who ...
In 1986, he and Salvay wrote the theme song to the short-lived CBS sitcom Better Days, a Lorimar series from producers Jeff Freilich, Stuart Sheslow and Arthur Silver. The Better Days title track has the distinction of being the first TV theme written by the two that Frederick performed vocals on (predating his performance of "Everywhere You ...
In the song, Offset raps in a rapid-fire flow, [2] bragging about his accomplishments in life [3] [4] At one point, he references fellow Migos member Takeoff ("I'm outta here, five, four, three, two, one: Takeoff / Touch my brother, pull a gun").
The people from Saban Entertainment wanted him to use the word "Go" since Haim Saban had success using that lyric in the Inspector Gadget theme song, which was the first hit theme he and writing partner Shuki Levy were credited with. [1] After two and a half hours, the song that resulted was the show's theme song, "Go Go Power Rangers". [5]
Neal H Pogue (born December 27, 1963) is an American producer, audio engineer and mixer originally from Roselle, New Jersey, and based in Los Angeles.Pogue is a multi-time Grammy Award winner, having first won for his engineering and mixing work on Outkast's Speakerboxxx/The Love Below (2004) [1] – which won the Album of the Year category, and his audio mixing work on Tyler, the Creator's ...