Posts Tagged ‘pop’
Get Low in Dem Jeans
Mikado – Get Low In Dem Jeans
This is a rough cut of my video for this song!
Crank dat Soulja CRANK DAT SPIDERMAN Boy BET Deelishis Hip Hop Awards 07 Live from the Red Carpet Awards 07 Live from the Red Carpet T.I. Arrested Gun charge Soulja Boy at Hip Hop Awards 07 Debra Lee, CEO BET BET Hip Hop Awards 07 Live Red Carpet Boondocks Katt Williams J. Holliday I LOVE NEW YORK 2 HOT97NY, Wendy Williams comic view date Kappa alpha Psi Omega Psi Deltas AKA Zetas Zeta phi beta, Phi Beta Sigma, Delta sigma theta, alpha kappa alpha, Alpha phi alpha, Iota phi theta, omega psi phi, Jay-Z ,Blue Magic
HBCU Network Tuskegee, A&T, Howard University, Blackstar, Mos Def & Talib Kweli, Common, Kanye West, HOT 97, I’M Broke
Lil Wayne P.Diddy Personal Assistant!! (less)
Added: September 24, 2007
Category: People & Blogs
Tags: hip hop BET awards 07 Russell Simmons HOT 97 mason Diddy Essence Vibe Men Enterprise thejewelryman jiatv
Rap Songs:
A-Mar & Dyl Feat. Max Minelli “To The Max” -
Kid Sister Feat. Kanye West “Pro Nails (Remix)”
Baby-D “I’m ‘Bout Money”
Lil’ Wayne “I’m Me”
Lupe Fiasco Feat. Matthew Santos “Streets On Fire”
N.E.R.D. “Everyone Nose”
Gucci Mane Feat. Trey Songz “Drink It Straight”
L.E.P. Feat. Fabolous “We Ain’t Playin’”
Lil’ Mama Feat. T-Pain & Chris Brown “Shawty Get Loose (Remix)”
Piccalo Feat. Flo Rida “Stick & Roll”
Bun B Feat. Sean Kingston “That’s Gangsta”
Plies “I Am The Club”
Bakeup Boyz Feat. Jim Jones “Now I Can Do That” (would’ve originally been on an October 2007 video if I made these videos back then)
Yung Ralph “I Work Hard”
Flo Rida Feat. Timbaland “Elevator”
Snoop Dogg “Sensual Seduction (Wideboys Edit)”
Snoop Dogg Feat. Robyn “Sexual Eruption (Fyre Department Remix)”
Natureboy Rowe “Str8 Stunt”
Huey Feat. MeMpHiTz & T-Pain “Tell Me This (G-5) (Remix)”
Dem Franchize Boyz “Talkin’ Out Da Side Of Ya Neck”
Ghostface Killah Feat. Kid Capri “We Celebrate”
Gorilla Zoe Feat. Gucci Mane “Waddle”
Wiz Khalifa “Say Yeah”
Guerilla Black “Whatever”
Soulja Boy Tell’em Feat. Arab “Yahhh! (The Wideboys Radio Edit)”
Kidz In The Hall “Drivin’ Down The Block”
Bloodraw Feat. Young Jeezy “Louie Bag”
Sheek Louch “Good Love”
Jim Jones Feat. The Game & Cobe “Love Me No More (Remix)”
R&B Songs:
Michael Jackson Feat. Akon “Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin’ 2008″
Erykah Badu “Honey”
Wyclef Jean Feat. Mary J. Blige “What About The Baby?”
Usher Feat. Young Jeezy “Love In This Club”
Mariah Carey “Touch My Body”
Asia Cruise “Selfish”
Making The Band 4 “Got Me Going”
Danity Kane “Damaged”
Brick & Lace “Love Is Wicked”
Janet “Rock With U”
Reggae Songs:
Shaggy Feat. Akon “What’s Love”
CDs/Mixtapes To Go Cop:
A-Mar & Dyl “Raggz 2 Riches”
Link: http://youtube.com/watch?v=mTHVzGVGdpQn6ai…
Natureboy Rowe “Dallas Hottest Commodity 1.7″
Bigga Rankin & F.A.M.E. “Beware Of F.A.M.E.”
DJ Obscene & Wes Fif “Money Is Power (Dead Presidents Reloaded)”
DJ Scream & Rocko Da Don “Swag Season”
Shod B & Pistol Pete “Smokin’ At A Gas Station”
VL Mike “Place Yo Betz”
DJ Scream & MLK Present Big Kuntry “Cocaine Kuntry (The Underboss)”
Jon Young & J. Cash “Motivation: The Mixtape”
DeTrane “Jigg City Radio Vol. 1″
Lil’ Wayne “In The Carter Chronicles”
Re-Up Gang “We Got It For Cheap Vol. 3″ (Hosted by DJ Drama)
Shawty Lo “Units In Da City”
shawty lo remix dey know they ludacris young jeezy plies D4L Dj Khaled E-40 E40
Duration : 0:4:10
Jay-Z – Change Clothes ft. Pharrell
Music video by Jay-Z performing Change Clothes. (C) 2003 Roc-A-Fella Records, LLC
Duration : 0:4:43
Jimmy Clanton – Venus In Blue Jeans
PLEASE NOTE: I divided my uploads between multiple channels, Bookmark this link in your browser for instant access to an index with links to all of John1948’s oldies classics. LINK: http://jeb1948.blogspot.com/
Jimmy Clanton was one of the most serious and complex of the generation of teen idols in which he is usually grouped, standing head and shoulders above the likes of Fabian, Bobby Rydell and others, but Clanton was a dedicated R&B enthusiast and singer with a great voice and a genuine feel for New Orleans music. What’s more, he also wrote many of the songs that he recorded — a relative rarity among White singers of his day.
Clanton was born in Baton Rouge, LA on September 2, 1940. He reached his teen years just as R&B was starting to find an audience among younger Whites. By the time he formed his first band, the Dixie Cats, in 1956, he was emulating the sounds of Fats Domino, Little Richard and Elvis Presley, and his other influences included Johnny Ace. His rivals in those days included a young John Fred, more than a decade away from his chart-topping “Judy in Disguise (With Glasses)” and Johnny Ramistella, later known as Johnny Rivers and still eight years from his big break. Clanton joined forces with a rival band leader, pianist Dick Holler (later the author of “Abraham, Martin and John”), in The Rockets, a combo that was hot enough to justify a 1957 trip to New Orleans and a visit to Cosimo Matassa, who owned the only recording studio in the city.
Matassa was taken with Clanton’s easygoing charm and his way with a song — he sang R&B from the heart, and he had an outgoing, likable personality. Matassa signed both Clanton and Holler under his management, recorded each one fronting The Rockets and then got them both recording deals with Mississippi-based Ace Records in September 1957.
At first, Clanton stood somewhat in the shadow of Huey “Piano” Smith, who was Ace’s golden boy with “Rockin’ Pneumonia and the Boogie-Woogie Flu” under his belt and “Don’t You Just Know It” waiting in the wings. Gradually, however, Clanton’s “Just a Dream” began to gain airplay and sales, starting in the South and then building elsewhere. Eventually, the record reached number four on the Billboard Pop chart and topped the R&B charts in 1958, and suddenly Clanton was one of Ace’s hottest properties. Appearances on American Bandstand followed, along with his first bookings outside of the South. There were engagements at the Hollywood Bowl and performances on Freed’s package tours which, in turn, led to Clanton’s starring role in the second of Freed’s two rock & roll films, Go Johnny Go, in which Clanton was seen performing “Ship on a Stormy Sea,” “My Love Is Strong” and “It Takes a Long, Long Time.” What’s more, he held his own in a cast that included Chuck Berry, Jackie Wilson, Sandy Stewart, the Flamingos, the Cadillacs, Jo-Ann Campbell, Eddie Cochran and Ritchie Valens.
Clanton’s next release was a double A-side single: “Letter to an Angel” (which owed a lot in feel and content to Johnny Ace’s “Pledging My Love”) and “A Part of Me,” both of which charted, though not high. He reached number 33 with “My Own True Love,” which was adapted from the main title music of Gone with the Wind –this was, ironically enough, Clanton’s first single that he didn’t write or co-write (usually with Matassa). It wasn’t until 1960 that he again reached the Top Ten, with “Go Jimmy Go,” written by Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman, which hit number five. By that time, the teen idol boom was going full-force and Clanton was firmly cast in this role — he was a natural with his good looks and easygoing personality, and his music was reshaped from R&B to more of a softer White rock & roll vein. He still wrote an occasional song, but Clanton increasingly turned to outside writers, including Pomus & Shuman and Neil Sedaka & Howie Greenfield.
In early 1961, Clanton was drafted, and he spent the next two years in the U.S. Army. Ace did its best to keep his name in the public eye with a series of single releases. Those early ’60s singles, including his own “Don’t Look at Me” and Dr. John’s “Because I Do,” were pretty powerful rockers, and marked something of a return to Clanton’s original New Orleans-based sound, in the wake of his success with pop ballads.
His return to performing coincided with the release of his last major hit, “Venus in Blue Jeans,” which peaked at number seven in mid-1962, maintaining his status as a mainstay of the Mississippi-based label. He had one further chart entry with “Darkest Street in Town,” but that was the end of Clanton’s run of hits. He continued performing even after Ace Records folded in the mid-1960s and later recorded for Phillips, Mala, Laurie and Imperial, but the British invasion heralded a shift in public taste that made it more difficult to get steady bookings.
~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
Duration : 0:2:21
Shakira -Underneath your clothes acustica
Shakira canta una splendida versione di underneath your clothes
Duration : 0:4:10
The Gloved One – “Clothes Meet Technology”
Watch a clip from Michael Jackson’s THIS IS IT – on Blu-ray & DVD January 26!
Duration : 0:2:2