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Bounce, like crunk, Miami bass, Baltimore club and juke music, is a highly regional form of urban dance music, which has nevertheless influenced a variety of other rap subgenres and even emerged in the mainstream. Atlanta 's crunk artists, such as Lil' Jon and the Ying Yang Twins, frequently incorporate bounce chants into their music (such as ...
Freddie Ross Jr. [2] (born January 28, 1978), better known by her stage name Big Freedia ( / ˈfriːdə / FREE-də ), is an American rapper and performer known for her work in the New Orleans genre of hip hop called bounce music. Freedia has been credited with helping popularize the genre, which had been largely underground since developing in ...
Road Show (previously titled Bounce, Wise Guys, and Gold!) is a musical with music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim and a book by John Weidman.It tells the story of Addison Mizner and his brother Wilson Mizner's adventures across America from the beginning of the twentieth century during the Klondike gold rush to the Florida real estate boom of the 1920s.
Big Freedia goes back to her roots on the 16-track “Central City,” the Queen of Bounce's first full-length studio album in nine years. Known for previous collaborations with Lizzo on ...
Melbourne bounce is a subgenre of electro house originating in Melbourne, Australia, characterized by the progression from the uptempo, horn-infused Dutch house style, tech trance synths, electro house stabs, and scouse house-influenced bass lines, sometimes also including elements of acid house, psytrance.
Bounce music, Hip hop. Occupation (s) Rapper, Record Producer. Years active. 2002–present. Terrelle Gallo (known by his stage name, Sissy Nobby) is an American bounce artist from New Orleans, [1] known for his hit songs, "Consequences" and "Gitty Up". Gallo is credited as one of the main pioneers of bounce music.
Twerking ( / ˈtwɜːrkɪŋ /; possibly from 'to work') is a type of dance that emerged from the bounce music scene of New Orleans in 1990, [1] which has a broader origin among other types of dancing found among the African diaspora that derives from Bantu-speaking Africans of Central Africa. [2] Individually performed chiefly but not ...
"Get Me Bodied" is a moderate R&B and bounce song, which displays influences of dance-pop, dancehall, and funk music. Jim DeRogatis of Chicago Sun-Times wrote that it is a musical mixture of double Dutch rhyming and reggae-rap.