"Mammoth" is a song by Belgian electronic DJ duo Dimitri Vegas & Like Mike and German DJ and producer Moguai. It was released on Beatport on 4 March 2013.[citation needed] The song charted in Belgium, Germany, France, and the Netherlands. The song also recently finished second in TomorrowLand Radio Ones top 1000 songs ever played at TomorrowLand. The song is synonymous with Dimitri Vegas and Like Mike's TomorrowLand sets. It was also used in the 2012 TomorrowLand after movie in a mashup with M83's hit Midnight City.

A year and a half later on 1 September 2014, "Mammoth" was re-released in a vocal version titled "Body Talk (Mammoth)" (also known as simply "Body Talk"), featuring vocals from English singer-songwriter Julian Perretta, co-written by American singer-songwriter Matthew Koma. Though this version was not as successful as the original instrumental, it peaked much higher in Belgium and also charted in France.


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A music video to accompany the release of the vocal version was released on Spinnin' Records' YouTube channel on 9 August 2014 at a total length of three minutes and fifty-eight seconds.[9] The video features model Lauren Niko, and is a one-shot for the first three and a half minutes until the song ends.

Belgian DJ and record producer duo Dimitri Vegas & Like Mike released their first compilation album in 2014. "Mammoth" was their first single to chart in four countries. "Tremor" with Martin Garrix became their most successful single so far as it has charted in five countries, their only song to achieve this.

The song became hugely popular in its release, being featured as the eight spot of 1001Tracklists Best Songs of 2013, with over 185 DJs supporting, and an outstanding 14.9 million play count in Youtube (as of february 2018).

It's not that their music has gotten worse (at least in my eyes, I like a lot of their stuff), but the live sets seemed to have dropped off massively. I just watched their Bringing Home the Madness show and every song seemed to transition on white noise or some terrible mix. Is this a by product of the music they are putting out now or is this something that is happening more within the genres.

Maybe I don't hear enough electro house to notice, or maybe I'm listening to all the wrong stuff, but is this a trend that's happening with other DJ's too? It feels like sets are more about the individual songs than the set itself.

The first half of the set was the strongest, as she knocked out a blistering pack of hits from The Supremes as well as her own stuff, track after track, daring the band to keep up with her. The audience was mix of what America really looks like when brought together properly, black, white, and otherwise, all singing along with Ross to songs like Love Child, huge grins and love spread across their faces, myself included.

Betting prop questions for halftime shows tend to look the same each year, like which song will open the performance, how many songs will be played in total, and what color outfit the performer will wear to open the show.

Rihanna has released 53 singles throughout her illustrious career, as well as 17 songs as a featured artist. Nine of those topped the Billboard Top 40, and an incredible 25 of those have peaked at No. 4 or better. So, it's easy to see why the options for 'first song' are so plentiful. It's typically pretty rare to have six songs at +505 or shorter in this prop category, never mind a whopping 10 at +1000 or less.

Emerging as the favorite, "Diamonds" has a slower-paced, bass-thumping cadence that highlights Ri's tremendous singing voice and introspective lyrics. But faster-tempo songs like "Don't Stop the Music" and the Calvin Harris mega-hit "We Found Love" have kicked off halftime shows in the past. And nobody would be surprised if she starts the show with her first and still most-famous hit "Umbrella," which always rocks the house and provides the opportunity for a massive cameo by her mentor, Jay-Z, who has also served as one of the producers of the Halftime Show since 2019.

"Lift Me Up" was written as a tribute to the late, great actor Chadwick Boseman as part of the soundtrack to Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, but many lyrics within the song also seem to parallel the continual struggle of being black in America, like "drowning in an endless sea," "burning in a hopeless dream," and the hauntingly beautiful last words pleading "lift me up, hold me down, keep me safe...we need light, we need love." This song would immediately give the audience goosebumps. If it's not the opening song, it might be the closer.

As we are going with "Life Me Up" for the first song, "Umbrella" is our obvious favorite for last song. It's her most popular song and it still bangs to this day, and it will strike a powerful chord with the audience to seal the deal as an unforgettable performance. Plus, it gives her a chance to share the stage with Jay-Z, one of the most popular recording artists in the U.S. and her musical mentor who helped her break into the biz.

Last year's superstar rap and R&B medley headlined by Dre, Snoop, and Eminem featured a whopping 10 songs, some of which included only one verse. Hell, we only got Em's speedy, tongue-twisting chorus from "Forgot About Dre" despite that being one of Dre and Em's most popular songs. It's tough to fit 10 songs into a performance under 15 minutes, but the good Dr. found a way. The Weeknd in Super Bowl 55 might be a better one to check out before betting this over/under, as he was the last solo performer to grace the halftime stage. He ultimately performed nine songs, a number we expect Rihanna to stick to this year.

All told, during the past 12 Super Bowl halftime shows, artists have averaged 8.99 songs, not counting pre-recorded excerpts. That number is obviously skewed high by 2020's dual-performance of Jennifer Lopez and Shakira (they hit a whopping 15 total songs), but the trend is still with the UNDER of 9.5. And with most of Rihanna's songs bangers from start to finish, we expect she'll opt to sing more verses within the songs than one or two individual verses from 10-plus songs.

Calvin Harris produced two of Rihanna's 10 most popular songs, "This is What You Came For" and "We Found Love," but DJ appearances during Super Bowl halftime shows have been rare. DJ Khaled, however, makes his way into basically everything, so he's a good sleeper bet here at +200. Eminem at +275 also seems like a good value, as he collaborated with Ri on "Love the Way You Lie," which became the third-most popular Rihanna song on the Billboard charts. It would mark Em's second halftime show in as many years, as he was a featured artist in the Dr. Dre halftime show for Super Bowl 56.

Another long shot is Kanye West, who we mentioned earlier has significantly damaged his public perception over the past few years. He's a featured artist in multiple Rihanna songs, including FourFiveSeconds with Paul McCartney on guitar. It's quite possible Ri just edits out Kanye's part and Sir Paul takes the stage with her, which would certainly be a nice surprise for the 35-and-older demographic.

The Las Vegas Pizza Festival, set for 1 to 4 p.m. Saturday at The Industrial Event Space, 2330 S. Industrial Road, brings together a host of Vegas pizza poobahs, headlined by Vincent Rotolo of Good Pie, Tony Gemignani of Pizza Rock and John Arena of Metro Pizza. The festival features unlimited samples of New York, Detroit, Sicilian and other styles of pizza. Tickets start at $75; vegaspizzafest.com. 2351a5e196

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