Sir Mix Alot Baby Got Back Download

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Rap hit the mainstream in the early 90s, and Sir Mix-a-Lot's classic 'Baby Got Back' was one of the hits driving that success. The single spent 5 weeks at #1 on Billboard's Hot 100 and sold more than 2 millions copies. Mix - Sir Mix-A-Lot - Baby Got Back (instrumental) YouTube Greatest Trick Plays in Baseball History - Duration: 6:56. Savage Brick Sports Recommended for you.

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About Sir Mix-A-Lot

Inextricably linked with his pop culture touchstone 'Baby Got Back,' Sir Mix-A-Lot parlayed a gonzo tribute to women with large buttocks into hip-hop immortality, even despite his failure to score another hit of its magnitude. But even before he struck crossover gold, Sir Mix-A-Lot was one of rap's great D.I.Y. success stories. Coming from a city -- Seattle -- with barely any hip-hop scene to speak of, Mix-A-Lot co-founded his own record label, promoted his music himself, produced all his own tracks, and essentially pulled himself up by the proverbial American bootstraps. Even before 'Baby Got Back,' Mix-A-Lot was a platinum-selling album artist with a strong following in the hip-hop community, known for bouncy, danceable, bass-heavy tracks indebted to old-school electro. However, it took signing with Rick Rubin's Def American label -- coupled with an exaggerated, parodic pimp image -- to carry him into the mainstream. Perceived as a one-hit novelty, he found it difficult to follow his breakout success, but kept on recording, and even toured as part of a rap-rock supergroup called Subset, a collaboration with the Presidents of the United States of America. Sir Mix-A-Lot was born Anthony Ray in Seattle on August 12, 1963. An eclectic music fan but a rabid hip-hop devotee, he was already actively rapping in the early '80s, and co-founded the Nastymix record label in 1983 with his DJ, Nasty Nes, who also hosted Seattle's first hip-hop radio show. His first single was 1987's 'Posse on Broadway,' which referred to a street in Seattle, not New York; it became a local hit, and paved the way for his first LP, 1988's Swass, which also featured the popular novelty 'Square Dance Rap,' and a Run-D.M.C.-style cover of Black Sabbath's 'Iron Man,' with backing by Seattle thrashers Metal Church. The video for 'Posse on Broadway' landed some airplay on MTV, and became Sir Mix-A-Lot's first national chart single in late 1988; that in turn pushed Swass into the Top 20 of the R&B album chart, and by 1989, it had sold over a million copies. Also in 1989, Mix-A-Lot released his follow up album Seminar, which produced three charting singles in 'Beepers,' 'My Hooptie,' and 'I Got Game'; while none were significant crossover hits with pop or R&B audiences, all performed well on the rap singles chart, and helped Seminar become Mix-A-Lot's second straight platinum album. Financial disputes with Nastymix resulted in a fierce court battle and ended Mix-A-Lot's association with the label. Fortunately, Def American head Rick Rubin stepped in to offer him a major-label contract. Mix-A-Lot had long had a knack for mimicking (and mocking) the pimps he'd watched while growing up in Seattle, and adopted their visual style with Rubin's encouragement. He debuted for Def American with 1992's Mack Daddy, whose first single, 'One Time's Got No Case,' was a critique of racial profiling by police. It went virtually unheard, but the follow-up, 'Baby Got Back,' became a pop phenomenon virtually from the moment MTV aired its provocative video (which was eventually consigned to evening-hours only). Seldom does a comic novelty song spark such a fierce cultural debate: no matter how ridiculous it sounded, 'Baby Got Back' touched on highly sensitive, hot-button issues of race and sex with a cheerful, good-natured crudeness that was guaranteed to offend more than a few. Was it a token of appreciation for women whose body types were rarely given positive cultural attention, or just another sexist objectification? Was it an indictment of narrow, white-dictated beauty standards that left many typical black women (and the black men who loved them) out in the cold, or did it simply build up one type of woman by denigrating another? Feminists picketed Sir Mix-A-Lot concerts all across the country that summer, but despite their efforts, record buyers sided with the rapper: 'Baby Got Back' spent five weeks atop the pop charts, selling over two million copies; it also pushed Mack Daddy into the Top Ten, and went on to win a Grammy for Best Rap Solo Performance. Billboard magazine ranked it as the second biggest single of the year, behind only Boyz II Men's juggernaut 'End of the Road.' With 1994's Chief Boot Knocka, Sir Mix-A-Lot tried to follow Mack Daddy -- and 'Baby Got Back' in particular -- with a set of danceable party tunes that, like the strip-club anthem 'Put 'Em on the Glass,' often played up his obsession with the female form. Although it sold respectably among R&B audiences, the mainstream -- perhaps assuming they had already heard Mix-A-Lot's best shot -- virtually ignored it. Personnel shakeups at American Recordings preceded 1996's Return of the Bumpasaurus, ensuring that it ranked a very low promotional priority for the label. Mix-A-Lot dissolved his relationship with them, and spent several years off record -- partly for legal reasons, partly because of a simple frustration with the music industry in general. During that time, he managed to hook up with the similarly frustrated members of the grunge/novelty band the Presidents of the United States of America. Mix-A-Lot had long been interested in rap-rock fusions -- in addition to his Metal Church collaboration, he'd also teamed up with Mudhoney on the Judgment Night soundtrack tune 'Freak Momma' -- and started playing with PUSA in 1998. Eventually, they adopted the name Subset, and worked on some material in the studio; they also mounted a small-scale tour in 2000, but subsequently went their separate ways, partly owing to musical differences and partly to a lack of enthusiasm for the process of putting out a record. Some of their studio recordings were leaked over the Internet, but were never officially released. Solo again, Sir Mix-A-Lot signed with the small Artist Direct label and released his sixth album, Daddy's Home, in 2003; the lead single, 'Big Johnson,' was a satire of men who exaggerated their manhood, written at the behest of female fans who wanted equal treatment in Mix-A-Lot's sex rhymes. ~ Steve Huey

Alvin garrett song by myself

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Hip-Hop/Rap

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In the same key as the original: D♭

Lyrics of Baby Got Back

She looks like one of those rap guy's girlfriend
They only talk to her because she looks like a total prostitute OK
Sir mix a lot hits
I can't believe it's just so round
I mean, uh, gross look she's just so black
I like big butts and I can not lie you other brothers can't deny
That when a girl walks in with an itty bitty waist and a round thing in your face
You get sprung you wanna pull up the tough 'cos you notice that butt was stuffed
I'm hooked and I can't stop staring
Oh baby I wanna get wit'cha and take your picture
My homeboys tried to warn me but with that butt you got makes
Ooh rumpo' smooth skin you say you wanna get in my Benz
Well use me use me 'cos you ain't that average groupy
She's sweat and wet got it goin' like a turbo 'Vette
I'm tired of magazines sayin' flat butts are the thing
Take the average black man and ask him that she gotta pack much back
So fellas fellas has your girlfriend got the butt
Shake it shake it shake that healthy butt baby got back
I like 'em round and big and when I'm throwin' a gig
I'm actin' like an animal
I wanna get you home and uh, double uh, uh, uh
I ain't talkin' 'bout Playboy 'cos silicone parts are made for toys
I want 'em real thick and juicy so find that juicy double
Beggin' for a piece of that bubble
So I'm lookin' at rock videos watch these bimbos walkin' like hoes
I'll keep my women like Flo Jo
I wanna get with ya
But I gotta be straight when I say I wanna uh
A lot of simps won't like this song
'Cos them punks like to hit it and quit it and I'd rather stay and play
'Cos I'm long and I'm strong and I'm down to get the friction on
So ladies ladies if you wanna role in my Mercedes
Download lagu sir mix alot baby got back
Then turn around stick it out even white boys got to shout oh baby's got back

Sir Mix A Lot Hits

Baby's got back yeah baby when it comes to females

Baby Got Back Sir Mix Alot Song Download

Thirty six twenty four thirty six only if she's five three
So your girlfriend rolls a Honda playin' workout tapes by Fonda
But Fonda ain't got a motor in the back of her Honda
My anaconda don't want none unless you've got buns hon'
You can do side bends or sit-ups but please don't lose that butt
Some brothers wanna play that hard role and tell you that the butt ain't gold
So they toss it and leave it and I pull up quick to retrieve it
So Cosmo says you're fat but I ain't down with that
'Cos your waist is small and your curves are kickin' and I'm thinkin' bout stickin'
To the beanpole dames in the magazines you ain't it Miss Thing
I can't resist her red beans and rice didn't miss her
Some knucklehead tried to dis 'cos his girls are on my list
And I pull up quick to get wit 'em
So ladies if the butt is round and you want a triple X throw down
Mix-a-Lot and kick them nasty thoughts
Baby's got back
Little in the middle but she got much back
Little in the middle but she got much back

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as made famous by Sir Mix-a-Lot

Original songwriter : Sir Mix-a-Lot

License courtesy of : Universal Music Publishing UK

Sir Mix A Lot Baby Got Back Download Mp3

This title is a cover of Baby Got Back as made famous by Sir Mix-a-Lot

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