There's nothing worse then when you're trying to host a party and the tunes are sub-par. When you've got your outfits on and the drinks flowin', what you need is a proper, curated party playlist that covers all the bases. Well, look no further. Party songs come in all shapes and sizes, but there are some rules: they have to be bangers, and they have to make you want to dance.

From its opening bars, this 2006 jam gets it right, appropriately heralding the entrance of Colombian pop royalty with a fanfare of trumpets. Few are able to meld a savvy hook and a globally-influenced beat as seamlessly as Shakira, which she does here with a salsa sample, a reggaeton pulse and a bilingual assist from Wyclef.


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A collaboration between Scottish electro house kingpin Calvin Harris and pop superstar Rihanna, "We Found Love" is a perfect storm of massive club sounds and soaring pop hooks. An irrepressible blend of euphoria and despair, the tune sat atop the Billboard Hot 100 for ten non-consecutive weeks, establishing it as RiRi's longest running number-one single.

I have always dowloaded free music from a third party and it was automatically added to my music app from apple but after the last update it stopped. The music will play via quicktime but won't import. Ive tried the drag and drop and used the import dialog and nothing happens. No error message, nothing. I tried opening quicktime inspector to see if it was a format issue and this is what i've got.I have tried changing my import settings to .mp3 and ACC but still had no luck. Can anyone help?

If none of them work you may have an invalid or corrupt file. This has been happening a lot lately with files from "questionable" sources such as rips from video sites. If this is your situation, use a 3rd party tool to clean up or convert the file, or seek a more reliable source.

On the newest FireTV OS for the Fire Stick Lite 2020 I noticed that when we play a third party app like Spotify for example music keeps playing when we press the home button. This is normal behavior, however when I launch my app I request the audio focus using the AudioManager and OnAudioFocusChangeListener (because I'm also playing music and don't want it to be noisy) so the 3rd party music stops playing. However, when I press play on the FireTV to control my media(Using ExoPlayer) it pauses my app, takes me back to the Spotify app and I lose focus of my own application.

We would need to use Media Session to tell the System that there is a media session happening in your app and each time you tell the system that your player is active or playing then your application would have priority over the media controllers on the remote and no other application can access it unless you state that your media session is no longer active.

AYESHA RASCOE, HOST: Kool & The Gang has never really needed a reason to party, but it certainly got one last week.(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "CELEBRATION")KOOL AND THE GANG: (Singing) Celebrate good times, come on. It's a celebration. Celebrate good times, come on.RASCOE: After 60 years moving and grooving and giving us all reason to get down, the band will be inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame this fall.(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "GET DOWN ON IT")KOOL AND THE GANG: (Singing) Tell me. Get down on it. Get down on it. Get down on it. Get down on it. Come on...RASCOE: Kool & The Gang is still active, though there's just one original member now, Robert "Kool" Bell. He told Rolling Stone last week that as excited as he is about the honor, it was bittersweet. In November, drummer and keyboardist, George "Funky" Brown, died at the age of 74, just a few months after the band released their newest album, "People Just Want To Have Fun." George Brown had also written a memoir, "Too Hot: Kool & The Gang & Me." When I talked with him last summer, I asked him about how he wrote songs.(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED NPR BROADCAST)GEORGE BROWN: I'm self-taught. And millions of musicians are the same. You know, you might just get that music. You might just get the groove, or you get a lyric line with the melody. Or someone might say something, and you go, wow, that's a great line, and you write it down.RASCOE: Like, get down on it (laughter).BROWN: Yeah. Yeah. Ladies' night.RASCOE: Yeah.BROWN: Things got too hot for me, man, I had to get out of there.RASCOE: (Laughter).(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "LADIES' NIGHT")KOOL AND THE GANG: (Singing) Oh, yes, it's ladies night, and the feeling's right. Oh yes it's ladies night, oh what a night (oh what a night).RASCOE: So you grew up in Jersey City, N.J., and that's where you met many of the band members when you all were just kids. How did Jersey City influence the band's sound and the music that you made together?BROWN: Well, we're talking about 1964. And Jersey City is a blue collar town. None of us were silver spoon babies - single parent. The mothers worked very, very hard. All Jersey City was the inner city, meaning, you know, the minority and the hardship. And that lent itself to writing and playing a certain way. Being untrained but knowing or teaching ourselves how to play, you come up with these ideas that are not in the books. You're off the page. And it comes out a certain way, and people go, oh, that's new. 'Cause the older musicians back then said, boy, you kids, man. That's some new stuff you're playing there.(SOUNDBITE OF KOOL AND THE GANG SONG, "JUNGLE BOOGIE")RASCOE: What is the Kool & The Gang sound? How would you define that?BROWN: Sound of happiness.RASCOE: I mean, as I said, Kool & The Gang has a new album out called "People Just Want To Have Fun." Let's play a little bit of that here. I think the song is called "Let's Party."(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "LET'S PARTY")KOOL AND THE GANG: (Singing) Let's party, get on down. Let's party. Let's party, get on down. Oh. Oh.RASCOE: How do you and the rest of the band create music now versus earlier in your career? Has the process changed?BROWN: It's changed quite a bit, but we still do some of the old-fashioned ways of writing the music and performing it. We get everybody in the studio still - drums, real horns, real piano, real everything. We might take a loop on some of them to lock it up a little bit. But that's about it.(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "WE ARE THE PARTY")KOOL AND THE GANG: (Singing) We are the party. We bring the party. We make the party go. We are the party. We bring the party...RASCOE: In your memoir, you also talk about some of the challenges of fame - a struggle with prescription drugs and depression. How were you able to balance some really kind of heavy burdens and still maintain your spark for, as you said, like, happy music, upbeat music?BROWN: Because that's what we do. You know, when it was time to go on stage, OK, let's become Kool & The Gang, you know? That's what we do. So when it was time to do, we did it.(LAUGHTER)RASCOE: Yeah. And all the other stuff you put it to the side?BROWN: Yeah. Everything else goes to the side.RASCOE: 'Cause I did want to ask you about that because there have been a lot of band members in The Gang over the years. Is it difficult to be dealing with a band and have to deal with other people? And then are you driven by the chemistry of making music with a particular group of people, or is it something else?BROWN: It's the chemistry. If the chemistry is there, bingo. It works. And you want to make it happen, and you want to see people happy. And you want to be successful with it. And you want to help create a culture - a world culture where people come together with that music. That music is bringing people together and making this one world culture greater than it was before.And when you do music that's happy music, that's what it does. It brings people to the clubs to have a good time. That's what we do. We say our prayer before we leave, and we say, let's go make some people happy.(SOUNDBITE OF KOOL AND THE GANG SONG, "HOLLYWOOD SWINGING")RASCOE: That was the late Kool & The Gang drummer and keyboardist, George Brown, talking to me last July. He died from cancer just a few months later. This fall, Kool & The Gang will be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall Fame.(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "HOLLYWOOD SWINGING")KOOL AND THE GANG: (Singing) Hollywood, Hollywood swinging. I remember...

Oakland-based rappers the Coup are about as adamantly political as hip-hop comes. The original cover art for Party Music, planned long before the events of September 11th, and originally intended to go to press on that fateful day, featured an image of the Twin Towers exploding, with the two rappers posturing in front of them-- one holding conductor's batons, the other holding a detonator. The image, says the duo, was intended as a metaphor for the effect music can have on a corrupt system. 75 Ark said no. A last minute phone-call stopped the presses and the cover was redesigned. Still, no doubt, the Coup will go down in history as a strange footnote to a tragic day, the unfortunate timing of the album cover remembered long after the music. And that's too bad, because Boots Riley and Pam the Funkstress deserve to be remembered for their music. You see, the Coup knows the secret to effective politicization: before you can change people's minds, you have to engage them.

Like Public Enemy and George Orwell before them, the Coup focuses on the art, not the politics, trusting that if they do one right, the other will follow suit. The result is music that questions the common presumption that all things political must also be dry and boring. For one, the Coup's is a sound drenched in R&B; and soul tradition, holding more in common with Outkast's raucous funk-driven beats than it does with similarly minded rap groups like Cannibal Ox. As such, the Coup are likely to reach an audience less accustomed to these types of ideas.

Wrapping their political missives in twisted, slithering rhymes like, "This is my resume/ Slash-resignation/ A ransom note/ With proposed legislation," Riley and Pam prove that the music is every bit as important as the politics. In "50 Million Ways to Kill a CEO," the Coup demonstrates a wickedly dark comic sensibility, taking the cartoonish tendency towards violence often prevalent in popular rap music and applying it to an uncharacteristic victim. Among their suggestions: "Toss a dollar in the river/ And when he jump in/ If you find he can swim/ Put lead boots on him and do it again/ You and a friend/ Videotape and the party don't end/ Tell him that boogers be sellin' like crack/ He gon' put the little baggies in his nose/ And suffocate like that/ Put a fifty in the barrel of a gun/ When he try to suck it out/ A-ha!/ Well, you know this one..." 152ee80cbc

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