Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
While Mark Ronson and Bruno Mars celebrate having the No. 1 song for the 13th straight week on Billboard with "Uptown Funk," the group Six13 gave the hit track a Passover makeover, calling it ...
Music video. "Uptown Funk" on YouTube. " Uptown Funk " is a song by British record producer Mark Ronson and 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 ...
Dark Lord Funk - Harry Potter Parody of ‘Uptown Funk’ is a YouTube [92] video produced by KFaceTV. The video parodies both the Harry Potter universe and English producer Mark Ronson’s video Uptown Funk (which features guest vocals by American recording artist Bruno Mars).
with new music by "Weird Al" Yankovic. "Amish Paradise". Bad Hair Day (1996) The Essential "Weird Al" Yankovic (2009) Weird: The Al Yankovic Story (2022) (rerecorded version) Parody of "Gangsta's Paradise" by Coolio feat. LV (which is a reworking of the Stevie Wonder song "Pastime Paradise").
The Navy salutes its home base of Annapolis, Md., in a new parody of "Uptown Funk" called "Naptown Funk." The Naval Academy-affiliated group Annapolis Midshipmen changes the lyrics into a proud ...
Admit it, we all love "Uptown Funk."When that song comes on, your body starts moving almost instantaneously. Just check out the video above that designed a whole wedding dance around that song.
Living in America (James Brown song) " Living in America " is a 1985 song composed by Dan Hartman and Charlie Midnight and performed by James Brown. It was released as a single in 1985 and reached number 4 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. The song entered the Billboard Top 40 on January 11, 1986, and remained on the chart for 11 weeks.
"Funk You Up" is a 1979 old school hip hop song recorded by the Sequence for Sugar Hill Records. It is significant as the first hip-hop song to be released by a female rap group (and by a rap group from the Southern United States, as all three members of The Sequence were natives of Columbia, South Carolina), and was the second single released on Sugar Hill, following "Rapper's Delight" by the ...