"OopDeeWopDee" | ||||
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Single by NSS16 | ||||
Released | April 20, 2004 | |||
Recorded | 2002 | |||
Genre | R&B, hip hop | |||
Length | 3:49 | |||
Label | Universal Music, Casablanca Records | |||
Songwriter(s) | Greg Lawson, Mike Anthony, Hakeem Khaaliq, David Banner (uncredited), Aloe Blacc (uncredited) | |||
Producer(s) | Greg Lawson (Producer), Hakeem Khaaliq(co-producer), Ric Wake (exec.) | |||
NSS16 singles chronology | ||||
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"OopDeeWopDee" is a hip hop, R&B, and soul song by Casablanca Records recording group NSS16. The song features Universal Records David Banner and Aloe Blacc. Released on April 20, 2004, the song was written by Greg Lawson, Mike Anthony, and multi-media activist Hakeem Khaaliq who served as the co-producer, music video treatment writer and Music video director for the single. Lyrically, the song is a young woman's plea to stay virtuous. Due to internal problems between management and the group never toured. [1] [2]
In Billboard Magazine, the remix featuring David Banner peaked at #49 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles Sales, which ranks sales of physical singles. [3]
The music video for "OopDeeWopDee" shows the group in an all women prison with Tommy Mottola as the Warden. Cameo appearances include, Game, The Pharcyde, Kam, Crooked I, Spitfiya and Bokeem Woodbine. Comic relief was provided by BET comic view comedian Glenn Peoples who played the prison's security. Filmed entirely on location in California. David Banner breaks the girls out of prison to attend a party.
House of Pain was an American hip-hop trio that released three albums in the 1990s. The group consisted of DJ Lethal, Danny Boy, and Everlast. The group's name is a reference to the H. G. Wells novel The Island of Dr. Moreau, a reference carried further by the naming of their 2011 tour He Who Breaks the Law. The group is best known for its 1992 hit single "Jump Around", which reached number 3 in their native United States of America, number 6 in Ireland and number 8 in the United Kingdom. The group broke up in 1996 due to what Everlast described as a toxic environment fueled by Danny Boy's drug addiction. Lead rapper Everlast eventually went on to pursue a solo career as a blues rock artist and member of the supergroup La Coka Nostra which also featured DJ Lethal. House of Pain reunited briefly in 2010 for a world tour.
Eamon Doyle, better known by his mononym Eamon, is an American singer and songwriter. He is mainly known for his 2003 hit single "Fuck It ".
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"Honey" is a song by American singer and songwriter Mariah Carey from her sixth studio album, Butterfly (1997). It was released as the lead single from Butterfly on July 29, 1997, by Columbia Records. The song was written and produced by Carey, Sean Combs, Kamaal "Q-Tip" Fareed and Steven "Stevie J" Jordan. The song samples "Hey DJ" by World-Famous Supreme Team and "The Body Rock" by the Treacherous Three. "Honey" was a redefining song in Carey's career, pushing her further into the hip hop scene.
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"Alley Oop" is a song written and composed by Dallas Frazier in 1957. The song was inspired by the V. T. Hamlin-created comic strip of the same name.
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