"Boom"
Single by T-Pain featuring Sin Sizzerb
from the album Thr33 Ringz
Released December 20, 2008
Format Digital download, CD single
Recorded 2008
Genre Hip-hop, electropop, Funk, R&B
Length 3:34
Label Nappy Boy/Sizzerb/Jive
Writer(s) T-Pain, Sin Sizzerb (Serbian-American Rapper
Producer T-Pain, Sin Sizzerb
T-Pain singles chronology
"Freeze"
(2008)
"Boom"
(2008)
"One More Drink"
(2008

"Boom" is a special collaboration single with Filip Filippi, better known as Sin Sizzerb, a Serbian-American Rapper. It was part of the repackaged album of T-pain's Three Ringz album, intended to be sold and distributed to USA and Serbia.

Chart positions [link]

"Boom" debuted at #14 on the Serbian Music Chart and also debuted at #8 on the MYX 2008 Year Ender Countdown due to digital downloads in those countries. It was a 2 year-hit in the Philippines and as well as Serbia.


https://wn.com/Boom_(T-Pain_song)

Boom

Boom may refer to:

Objects

  • Boom (containment), a temporary floating barrier used to contain an oil spill
  • Boom (navigational barrier), an obstacle strung across a navigable stretch of water to control or block navigation
  • Boom (sailing), spar at the foot of a sail on a sailboat
  • Boom (ship), a type of Arab sailing vessel
  • Boom (windsurfing), a wishbone shaped piece of windsurfing equipment
  • Log boom, a barrier placed in a river
  • Boom, the lifting part of a crane (machine)
  • Boom, the rear fuselage of an aircraft, as in twin boom
  • Other common meanings

  • Economic boom, time of rapid growth in wealth, as in a boom town
  • Latin American Boom, a literary movement in 1960s Latin America
  • Sonic boom, the sound created by an object traveling through the air faster than the speed of sound
  • Explosion, the sound that an explosion makes is a boom
  • Arts and entertainment

    Music

    Performers

  • Boom! (band), a pop band founded by Hear'Say member Johnny Shentall
  • The Boom, a Japanese rock band
  • Boom Gaspar (born 1953), piano/keyboard/organ player for the band Pearl Jam
  • Boom! (TV series)

    Boom! is an American reality television series that aired on Spike TV in 2005 and was hosted by Kourtney Klein. It featured a group of demolition experts using explosives to destroy objects such as trailers, houses, boats and cars. Often, the suggestions on what should be blown up were sent in by home viewers via a "BOOM! Mailbag". Each episode covered obtaining the materials (such as the item to be destroyed), cleaning, gutting, and rigging the thing with explosives, and then making the final countdown and pushing the detonator, and watching the devastation.

    References

    External links

  • Boom! at the Internet Movie Database
  • Boom! (film)

    Boom! is a 1968 British drama film starring Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton and Noël Coward, directed by Joseph Losey, and adapted from the play The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore by Tennessee Williams.

    Plot

    Flora 'Sissy' Goforth (Taylor, in a part written for an older woman) is a terminally ill woman living with a coterie of servants in a large mansion on a secluded island. Into her life comes a mysterious man, Christopher Flanders, nicknamed "Angelo Del Morte" (played by then-husband Burton, in a part intended for a very young man). The mysterious man may or may not be "The Angel of Death".

    The interaction between Goforth and Flanders forms the backbone of the plot, with both of the major characters voicing lines of dialogue that carry allegorical and Symbolist significance. Secondary characters chime in, such as "the Witch of Capri" (Coward). The movie mingles respect and contempt for human beings who, like Goforth, continue to deny their own death even as it draws closer and closer. It examines how these characters can enlist and redirect their fading erotic drive into the reinforcement of this denial.

    Ming (typefaces)

    Ming or Song is a category of typefaces used to display Chinese characters, which are used in the Chinese, Japanese, and Korean languages. They are currently the most common style of type in print for Chinese and Japanese.

    Name

    The names Song (or Sung) and Ming correspond to the Song Dynasty when a distinctive printed style of regular script was developed, and the Ming Dynasty during which that style developed into the Ming typeface style. In Mainland China, the most common name is Song (the Mainland Chinese standardized Ming typeface in Microsoft Windows being named SimSun). In Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan and Korea, Ming is prevalent. In Hong Kong and Taiwan, “Song typeface” (宋體) has been used but “Ming typeface” (明體) has increased currency since the advent of desktop publishing. Some type foundries use "Song" to refer to this style of typeface that follows a standard such as the Standard Form of National Characters, and “Ming” to refer to typefaces that resemble forms found in the Kangxi dictionary.

    Song (album)

    Song is the third and final album of Lullaby for the Working Class. It was released October 19, 1999 on Bar/None Records.

    Track listing

  • "Expand, Contract"
  • "Inherent Song"
  • "Asleep on the Subway"
  • "Seizures"
  • "Non Serviam"
  • "Sketchings on a Bar Room Napkin"
  • "Kitchen Song"
  • "Ghosts"
  • "Still Life"

  • Song (state)

    Sòng (Chinese: ; Old Chinese: *[s]ˤuŋ-s) was a state during the Zhou dynasty of ancient China, with its capital at Shangqiu. The state was founded soon after King Wu of Zhou conquered the Shang dynasty to establish the Zhou dynasty in 1046/46 BC. It was conquered by the State of Qi in 286 BC, during the Warring States period. Confucius was a descendant of a Song nobleman who moved to the State of Lu.

    Origin

    After King Wu overthrew the last ruler of Shang, marking the transition to the Zhou Dynasty, the victor was honor-bound by feudal etiquette to allow the defeated house (Shang) to continue offering sacrifices to their ancestors. As a result, for a time Shang became a vassal state of Zhou, with the Shang heir Wu Geng allowed to continue ancestor worship at Yin (殷).

    However, after King Wu’s death, Wu Geng fomented a rebellion and was killed by the Duke of Zhou. Another Shang royal family descendant, Weizi (微子), was granted land at Shangqiu (商邱 ‘the hill of Shang’), where the capital of the new State of Song was built.

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