Aaron's Party (Come Get It)
File:Aaron Carter - Aaron's Party album.jpg
Studio album by Aaron Carter
Released September 26, 2000 (2000-09-26)
Recorded 2000
Genre Pop, pop rap, dance-pop
Length 36:46
Label Jive Records
Producer Steve Mac
Aaron Carter chronology
Aaron Carter
(1997)
Aaron's Party (Come Get It)
(2000)
Oh Aaron
(2001)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 2/5 stars[1]
Entertainment Weekly C−[2]
Rolling Stone 2/5 stars[3]

Aaron's Party (Come Get It) is American pop singer Aaron Carter's 2nd studio album to follow-up to his international debut album. This album was released in the fall of 2000. This album was also certified 3× Platinum by the RIAA for selling over 3 million copies in the United States. The lead single "Aaron's Party (Come Get It)" was featured on the 2000 compilation album Now That's What I Call Music! 5.

Contents

Track listing [link]

  1. "Introduction: Come to the Party" (Carter) – 0:21
  2. "Aaron's Party (Come Get It)" (Kierulf/Schwartz) – 3:24 (Interlude: "Candy Call" – 0:38)
  3. "I Want Candy" (Berns/Feldman/Goldstein/Gottehrer) – 3:13 (Interlude: "Big Brother" – 0:27)
  4. "Bounce" (Albert/Barber/Bostelaar/Hawes/Kirtley/Martin/Stuart) – 3:19 (Interlude: "Yes!" – 0:10)
  5. "My Internet Girl" (Curle/Dennis/Nicholas) – 4:00 (Interlude: "I Can See Her Voice" – 0:07)
  6. "That's How I Beat Shaq" (Kierulf/Schwartz) – 3:25 (Interlude: "Let's Go" – 0:01)
  7. "The Clapping Song" (Chase/Kent/McCarthy) – 2:58 (Interlude: "Snappy Burger" – 0:46)
  8. "Iko Iko" (Hawkins/Hawkins/Johnson/Jones/Jones/Jones/Thomas) – 2:41 (Interlude: "Teacher" – 1:05)
  9. "Real Good Time" (Mehyer/Olafsdottir) – 3:14 (Interlude: "Lunch at the Studio" – 0:34)
  10. "Tell Me What You Want" (Dozier) – 3:12 (Interlude: "Stuffed!" – 0:06)
  11. "Girl You Shine" (Carolla/Elofsson/Landin/Larsson) – 3:21 (Interlude: "Big Bad 'Shine-y' Beat Box" – 0:27)
  12. "Life Is a Party" (Goldmark/Hicks/Houston) – 3:25 (Non-U.S. edition only)
  13. "(Have Some) Fun with the Funk" (Lunt) – 3:32 (Bonus track in some regions)
  14. "Hang on Sloopy" (Farrell/Russell) – 3:21 (Bonus track in some regions)

Synopsis [link]

All of the songs on the album were separated by interludes (except after track 12 for releases with bonus tracks), attached at the end of the previous song (thus the length of the tracks listed above include the length of the interlude). Their lengths spanned from a one-second-long interlude entitled "Let's Go" to a skit over a minute long entitled "Teacher".

In some regions, "(Have Some) Fun with the Funk" (also available on the Pokémon: The First Movie CD) and "Hang on Sloopy" were released as bonus tracks, bringing those releases' total amount of songs to 14. Some releases of the album also minorly differ; instead of "Hang on Sloopy" as a bonus track, the UK edition included "Jump, Jump", which also featured on the test pressing of the album. The U.S. version notably omitted "Life Is a Party" (available on the Rugrats in Paris: The Movie CD).

The Japanese edition (as well has having both bonus tracks and a spoken "Aaron Message") had a completely different album cover; some versions of this cover include it being completely orange apart from a circle showing Aaron's face at what looks like a party. The full version of this cover is the cover for some editions as well.

Promotion [link]

The songs, "Girl You Shine, "I Want Candy", "Aaron's Party (Come Get It)", "That's How I Beat Shaq", and "Bounce" were played frequently on Radio Disney whereas the videos of "I Want Candy", "That's How I Beat Shaq", "Aaron's Party (Come Get It)", and "Bounce" received heavy rotation on MTV, VH1 and Disney and Nickelodeon. He also made several appearances on Nickelodeon and opened up concerts for Britney Spears and the Backstreet Boys. Late in 2000, the album was certified platinum.

One of his songs, "Iko Iko" was featured in the movie The Little Vampire,

"Girl You Shine" was featured on Radio Disney Jams, Vol. 2 in early 2000. "Bounce" is featured on Radio Disney Jams, Vol. 4.

Carter promoted his album by performing "I Want Candy" on Lizzie McGuire on March 13, 2001. That same month, he and fellow teen star Samantha Mumba performed at a concert in Disney MGM Studios that aired on the Disney Channel entitled Aaron Carter and Samantha Mumba In Concert. Carter's part of the concert can be seen on the DVD Aaron's Party: Live in Concert along with the music video of That's How I Beat Shaq along with clips of him at Disney World, his 13th birthday, and Carter recording his then-upcoming album Oh Aaron.

Singles [link]

U.S. album sales and information [link]

  • Week 1: 70,000 (70,000)
  • Week 2: 57,000 (127,000)
  • Week 3: 41,000 (168,000)
  • Week 4: 39,000 (207,000)
  • Week 5: 33,000 (240,000)
  • Week 6: 34,000 (274,000)
  • Week 7: 48,000 (322,000)
  • Week 8: 49,000 (369,000)
  • Week 9: 86,000 (455,000)
  • Week 10: 81,000 (536,000)
  • Week 11: 98,000 (634,000)
  • Week 12: 123,000 (757,000)

The album sold very well throughout Christmas 2000 and reappeared in the top 50 of the chart in 2001. The album is Carter's most successful, having been certified 3× Platinum by the RIAA, and having sold over 3 million copies in the United States to date.

References [link]


https://wn.com/Aaron's_Party_(Come_Get_It)

Bounce (Sarah Connor song)

"Bounce" is a song by German recording artist Sarah Connor, taken from her second studio album, Unbelievable (2002). Written by Bülent Aris, Toni Cottura, and Anthony Freeman, with production helmed by the former, the uptempo pop song samples Mary J. Blige's 2001 song "Family Affair", while featuring guest vocals by Wyclef Jean. "Bounce" was originally released as the album's fourth and final single in Central Europe on 21 July 2003, amid Connor's first pregnancy. It reached the top twenty in Austria, Germany, Switzerland, and Walloon Region of Belgium.

In winter 2003 radio programmers Tod Tucker and Matt "the bratt" Derrick at 106.9 K-HITS in Tulsa, Oklahoma took hold of a copy of the single and began to give it airplay. Due to large amounts of airplay in the United States, the song reached number eleven on Billboard's Top 40 Mainstream and number twenty-one on Top 40 Tracks charts, eventually charting on the Billboard Hot 100 at number fifty-four. "Bounce" was officially given a physical US release on 4 May 2004, serving as Connor's debut single there. It was also released in Australia and the United Kingdom, where it reached number 14 on both charts. The radio version of the song was featured on the 2004 compilation album Now That's What I Call Music! 15.

Bounce (golf)

In golf, bounce or bounce angle is the angle inscribed by the leading edge of a golfing iron (particularly a wedge), the sole of the club, and the ground. In plainer terms, bounce angle is an indication of how much the sole, or bottom-most part, of the club head lifts the leading edge. A high bounce angle (angles of 12–15° are not uncommon) indicates a sole which lifts the leading edge significantly, whereas a club with little or no bounce allows the leading edge to contact the ground without interference.

The purpose of introducing bounce into club head design is to control how easily wedges, with their steep angles of attack, penetrate the ground under the ball. A low- or zero-bounce club has a streamlined profile, and the sharp leading edge of the club will tend to cut into the ground readily. When this is undesirable, the use of a club with more bounce will cause the sole of the club to impact first, keeping the wedge from digging into the surface by causing it to "bounce" across the surface instead.

Stunt

A stunt is an unusual and difficult physical feat or an act requiring a special skill, performed for artistic purposes usually on television, theatre, or cinema. Stunts are a feature of many action films. Before computer generated imagery special effects, these effects were limited to the use of models, false perspective and other in-camera effects, unless the creator could find someone willing to jump from car to car or hang from the edge of a skyscraper: the stunt performer or stunt double.

Types of stunt effects

Practical effects

One of the most-frequently used practical stunts is stage combat. Although contact is normally avoided, many elements of stage combat, such as sword fighting, martial arts, and acrobatics required contact between performers in order to facilitate the creation of a particular effect, such as noise or physical interaction. Stunt performances are highly choreographed and may be rigorously rehearsed for hours, days and sometimes weeks before a performance. Seasoned professionals will commonly treat a performance as if they have never done it before, since the risks in stunt work are high, every move and position must be correct to reduce risk of injury from accidents. Examples of practical effects include tripping and falling down, high jumps, extreme sporting moves, acrobatics and high diving, spins, gainer falls, "suicide backflips," and other martial arts stunts.

Stunt (gridiron football)

A stunt in American football and Canadian football, sometimes called a twist, is a planned maneuver by a pair of players of the defensive team by which they exchange roles to better slip past blockers of the offensive team at the beginning of a play.

The purpose of a stunt is to confuse opposing blockers, which is an aid to the defense in rushing an opposing forward pass or kick. The main weakness of a stunt is that it is more vulnerable than average to running plays by the opposing team. In most cases, the defense will not use a play incorporating stunting if it expects a running play from the offense.

There are two main types of stunts. In one, a line player, who would otherwise try to charge forward, instead drops back, and a nearby linebacker or defensive back charges forward instead. In the other, which is known as cross-rushing, line players, instead of charging straight ahead, cross paths. One of them may follow a looping path that goes behind the other before moving forward (in which case the stunt is called a "loop"), or one may wait for the other to penetrate slightly first, and then cross behind, their paths angling across each other. In some variants, a rushing player will run around more than one rushing teammate.

Stunt (disambiguation)

A stunt is a difficult or unusual feat performed for film or theatre.

Stunt or Stunting may also refer to:

  • Stunted growth or stunting, a primary manifestation of malnutrition in early childhood
  • Stunt (botany), a plant disease that results in dwarfing and loss of vigor
  • Stunt (music act), a British dance music act
  • Stunt (album), an album by Barenaked Ladies
  • Stunts (video game), a driving video game
  • Stunt (football), an American Football defensive play
  • Stunting (broadcasting), when a radio station abruptly begins broadcasting seemingly uncharacteristic programming
  • Stunt Records, a record label
  • Publicity stunt, a planned event designed to attract the public's attention to the promoters or their causes
  • See also

  • Stunters, an emerging motorsport
  • Stunt actor
  • Stunt coordinator
  • Stunt team
  • Stunt double
  • Stunt performer
  • "Stunt 101", a G-Unit song
  • List of cheerleading stunts
  • Stuntman (disambiguation)
  • Podcasts:

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