"Jump" is a song by American rock band Van Halen. It was released in December 1983 as the lead single of their sixth studio album, 1984. It is Van Halen's most successful single, reaching number 1 on the US Billboard Hot 100.[1] The song differs from earlier Van Halen songs in that it is driven by a keyboard riff, although the song does contain a guitar solo. David Lee Roth dedicated the song to martial artist Benny "The Jet" Urquidez, of whom he was a student.[2] In 2021, Rolling Stone ranked "Jump" at number 177 on its updated list of the "500 Greatest Songs of All Time".[3]

The keyboard part was performed on an Oberheim OB-Xa.[7][8] Live performances began with Eddie's synthesizer solo "1984". During the reunion tour with Roth, the two songs were used for the band's encore.


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Musically, the song was a departure from the band's original style,[10] embracing more of a popular and radio-friendly sound. "Jump" has been described as a "synth-rocker",[11] as a combination of hard rock and pop,[12] as exemplifying pop rock of the 1980s, built on a classic rock foundation of repeated bass notes and having standard rock instrumentation,[13] and as "a true rock masterpiece."[14] The song has been also described as a pop/glam metal anthem.[15][16][17][18][19]

The music video for "Jump" was directed by Pete Angelus and David Lee Roth. It is a straightforward performance clip. It was nominated for three MTV Video Music Awards, and won "Best Stage Performance" for the video. The audio mix of the song in video version has an extra "Ah oh oh!" yell from Roth before the last chorus.

"Jump" was the theme song for the introduction of Chicago Cubs broadcasts on WGN-TV in 1984 and 1985, and was formerly what the team would run onto the field to before the top of the 1st inning.[24][25]

"Jump" was ranked number 15 on VH1's 100 Greatest Songs of the 1980s. The song was listed by The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum as one of the "500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll."[26] Chuck Klosterman of Vulture.com ranked it the 16th-best Van Halen song, calling it "an articulation of unadulterated joy and the unprecedented power of six rudimentary keyboard chords arranged in the best possible sequence."[16] Ahead of the 2012 Summer Olympics, the song was voted as the favourite sporting anthem, in a poll of members of PRS for Music.[27]

The song was used in soundtrack of the 2015 biopic film Eddie the Eagle, being described by Blake Goble of Consequence of Sound as "the most on-the-nose use of Van Halen's 'Jump' ever committed to celluloid".[28] "Jump" appears in the 2018 science fiction film Ready Player One. The song was used in the opening credits of the film and in the trailer for the film,[29][30] and considered an "inspired choice" by Joe Reid of Decider.com.[31]

"Jump (Live)" was released as a single in 1993. The performance was recorded at the Selland Arena in Fresno, California, in May 1992, during the For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge Tour. "Jump" and the B-side, "Love Walks In", are the same versions that appear on the album Live: Right Here, Right Now. On the compact disc release of the single, "Mine All Mine" and "Eagles Fly" are previously unreleased live versions. All songs were produced by Van Halen and Andy Johns, except "Mine All Mine", which was produced by Van Halen and Donn Landee.[63]

If the feature is removed at all, it would be really nice to put it back again, cause its really convenient to be able to jump to the entry within your own playlist and to see which similar songs are right next to that entry, since it is sorted by alphabet and can lead you to other songs of the same band for example, which you have saved in the past.

I had to resize the whole left panel, to let the picture appear again, which usually shows up, when you run a song. Somehow that picture dissappeared permanently for some reason, even after i restarted the pc or the spotify client.

In other words, no matter how I have the playlist sorted, clicking the image always brings me to the same row-index (scrolls a certain distance down the list). It brings to me to the wrong song every time, except when I sort by date.

The Cursor follows playback preference messes with me sometimes when I'm organizing a non-active playlist or doing other tasks. I've made a keyboard shortcut to go to the song being played only when I want.

You can access the current playing song from the menu bar View -> Show Now Playing in Playlist. However this menu item is usually hidden. If you press the menu bar while holding the shift key however all the hidden commands will show.

Everytime i record something into Edison, no song jump marker is created once it loops on itself. I checked to see if there was a check mark next to regions and there is, but still no song jump marker.

Since the update to Monterey I've been experiencing some weird behavior when adding songs to a playlist (or editing info of a song/album). It seems as soon as Apple Music is done making changes, it just randomly decides to jump to a different spot in my current view.

Example: In the Library - Songs view, I went to an album by the artist "Dave". I selected the 12 songs from the album, two-finger click, Add to Last Playlist, and the Songs view jumps down to Jeezy. Do the same thing for a Turnstile album and it jumps down to Various Artists.

Another, slightly less annoying bug, is that when using the keyboard to jump to the artist you want (in the example above typing "Dave") the first matching song is highlighted at the bottom of the view, instead of the top as it's been since... forever.

You are not alone. I've been hard rating songs in playlists and everytime I edit a song's rating it jumps to a random other place in the playlist. Very frustrating! Also, when I press command+L to jump to the current song, the song is displayed at the bottom of the playlist where it used to be at the top. I have reported the bug on -music.html

The view jumping is an irritation but I've realised that when the view jumps, it is actually confirmation that the changes I make are successfully synched to the cloud music library. The opposite is also true, when the view doesn't jump after making changes it indicates that changes made are not successfully being synched to your cloud music library (i.e. the next time you open the Music app it seems all changes you made previously were lost, this is because it didn't properly sync to your cloud music library).

For a workaround to this issue please see my post at =256740907022#256740907022 (here I use deleting songs as an example, but the same goes for changing the star rating of a song to test whether your cloud library is successfully synching from your Mac).

Apple has made viewing your library in song view as difficult as possible. This bug has put me over my limit. In addition to the random jumping, the following changes have been killing me slowly and after 20 years of sticking with it, I'm now looking for an alternative:

I've found that while in the Songs area if you add the "Cloud Status" column SOME of the problems get better. For example: the screen still jumps after making a change BUT now the up/down arrow solution that returns you to currently playing works again!

Yeah, this needs to be fixed. I'm currently building a playlist of 20,000+ songs, and it's really infuriating to scroll through and find where I was working before the view jumped to the top of the list.

All of my Apple Music columns jump to the top or bottom of the list instead of the selected category. Example if I am trying to categorize by year, it will jump to 2021(the top) or no year (the bottom).

Very frustrating. Also a little wonky when trying to rate or love songs, jumps around like a super sensitive mouse pad. Also still dealing with the occasionally cut off song at 15 seconds. If it is not one thing, its the other.

I had the same feeling listening to this song, is ok but there is something missing and feels like I heard this before but better. Even if I cant pinpoint where feels familiar but lacking. Is a fun song but feels forgetable. I was hoping for more cause they are quite good.

Nothing wrong with it, aint bad just aint great either. At least is how I feel about it.

In 2003, the stadium went through some renovations, and UW-Madison administrators asked for the song not to be played at the opening home game. They were concerned that the force of the jumping fans would shake something loose and cause a safety threat.

This past weekend I had my granddaughters, and I was trying to teach them to play jump-rope. I was also teaching them some of those old-time favorite jumping songs. I had to look a few of them up, but they came right back to me, and it took me back to 1970.

I sure hope the young girls of today find as much joy in a simple game of jump rope as I did was when I was a child. If you have little ones in your life, please take a moment to teach them some of these old fashion jump rope songs, you will be making wonderful memories for them!

I loved to jump rope when I was in elementary school. There was a little room off the gym that housed all manner of things, including jump ropes and hula-hoops. Whenever it rained we were allowed to play in the gym and everyone always tried to get to the jump ropes and hula-hoops first. I never did though. On those rainy days the gym turned into bedlam with kids running and screaming. It was impossible to jump rope or hula-hoop without someone running into you or pushing you down in the name of fun.

I think I heard the girls use this for a jump rope song but was used mostly to torment a boy and girl that were struck on one another. Debbie and David setting in a tree, K I SS I N G, first came love, then came marriage, then comes David with a baby carriage. 2351a5e196

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