2 A.M. may refer to:
The X Factor is the tenth studio album by English heavy metal band Iron Maiden, released on 2 October 1995 through EMI. It is the band's first album to include Blaze Bayley, formerly of Wolfsbane, as vocalist, replacing Bruce Dickinson who left the band following their previous tour to pursue a solo career. The album takes a more darker tone than the band's first nine releases, due to the lyrics being based on personal issues surrounding Steve Harris at the time, who was in the midst of a divorce. This is reflected in the cover artwork, which graphically depicts the band's mascot, Eddie, being vivisected by machine.
The release's title came about at the start of the album's recording. According to producer Nigel Green:
"We all felt that the way things were progressing – the songs, Blaze's new involvement, the sound, the commitment – the new album really would have that extra quality, that bit of magic, that 'X Factor'. This became the working title for the album and we liked it, so we kept it. It is also very apt as this is our tenth studio album and "X" can bring up many images."
69 Boyz is an American Miami bass and hip hop group originating from Jacksonville, Florida, but now based largely in Orlando, Florida. The group was initiated by producers C.C. Lemonhead and Jay Ski (of Chill Deal, Quad City DJs and 95 South), and consists of rappers La Shaun Van "Thrill Da Playa" Bryant, Barry "Fast" Wright, Greg "Slow" Thomas, Michael "Quick Skeet" Fisher, Reginald "Busta Nut" Gunderson, and "Rottweiler" Mike Mike.
The group had success in the summer of 1994 with its first single, "Tootsee Roll", from their debut album 199Quad. The song went platinum and reached number 8 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 9 on the R&B chart. The second single, "Kitty Kitty," peaked at number 55 on the Billboard Hot 100. The band was awarded three Soul Train Music Award nominations in 1995.
Their second album, The Wait is Over, came out in July 1998 and featured the single, "Woof Woof," which was written for the feature film Dr. Dolittle starring Eddie Murphy. The song reached number 31 on the Billboard Hot 100.
The Butterfly, that's old
Let me see the Tootsee Roll
Yeah, 1994
69 Boys backed up by the door next to the DJ
(chorus 1)
Cotton candy sweet to go, let me see that Tootsee Roll
Come on, Tootsee Roll, just make that Tootsee Roll
Here we go, Tootsee Roll, yeah, Tootsee Roll
Let me see that Tootsee Roll
Get on the floor and make that Tootsee Roll
(Chorus 2)
To the left, to the left, to the right, to the right
To the front, to the front, to the back, to the back
Now dip, baby, dip, come on dip, baby, dip
Dip, baby, dip, just dip, baby dip
Just dip, cotton candy free to go
Let me see the Tootsee Roll
I don't know what you've been told
It ain't the butterfly, it's the Tootsee Roll
A brand new dance
Grab a partner and get on the dance floor
And work them hips a little bit
Get to that dip a little bit
Oh yeah, you got it, no whips, baby, no buts about it
And you over there with the long hair
Keep pumpin' that hair up 'cause it ain't hard
Just a brand new dance far the 1991
69 is the place to be, AOC, is what we came to see
(Chorus 4)
I feel a whoop, domino, a whoop, domino
Say what, I feel a whoop, domino, a whoop, domino
Whoop, whoop, whoop, whoop
Whoop, whoop, whoop, whoop
Chorus 1, 2
I fell a whoop, domino, a whoop, domino
Say what, I feel a whoop, domino, a whoop, domino
5, 4, 3, 2, 1
Whoop, whoop, whoop, whoop
Whoop, whoop, whoop, whoop
Verse 1
The butterfly that's old
Chorus 1, 2, 3, 4
Just roll (until song fades)