Plies bust it baby music video
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It is his second top 10 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 and also his biggest hit on the Billboard Hot 100 to date, peaking at #7 thus far, surpassing the #9 peak of " Shawty" in 2007, and tying for Slip-n-Slide Records' highest placing on the Hot 100 (the other SNS single to reach that peak was Trick Daddy's 2004 single "Let's Go" featuring Lil Jon and Twista). 2" has so far peaked at #2, surpassing the original "Bust It Baby". Another seven videos were recently shot to help introduce the new album." Bust It Baby (Part 2)" is the second part of the two single release of "Bust It Baby", making it the first "double single." On the R&B/Hip Hop chart, "Bust It Baby Pt. “100 Years” and “Runnin’ My Momma Crazy” have collectively amassed more than 4 million plays on YouTube, and Plies’ MySpace page, where fans can also view the clips, touts more than 35 million views. Last time around, Plies shot videos for eight songs, which were released every week shortly after “The Real Testament” hit stores. It’ll all be an extension of the ‘Bust It Baby’ movement and give people insight into Plies and his environment.” “We’re going to do a reality show branding the term, a clothing line and a calendar. “‘Bust It Baby Part 2’ has grown a life of its own,” product manager Dionne Harper says. Hip-hop tracks represented only 34 percent of the top 10 songs on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart since January 2007.Īnd with another hit swiftly climbing the charts, Atlantic is shifting the Plies brand into high gear. 1 on Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs in almost a year. These days it’s quite an accomplishment for a rap song to place that high on the charts Lil Wayne’s “Lollipop” recently became the first rap song to reach No. 9 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and Billboard Hot 100 charts, respectively, while “The Real Testament” has sold 498,000 copies in the United States, according to Nielsen SoundScan. Mainstream recognition arrived in summer 2007 with the single “Shawty” featuring T-Pain, which offered a radio-friendly hook more in the vein of R&B. Lucas signed Plies in 2004 and two years later brokered a distribution deal with Atlantic for his albums. He soon broke through with mixtapes that were sold hand-to-hand around Florida and garnered the attention of Slip-N-Slide Records CEO Ted Lucas. But Levatte heard it and was impressed enough to offer Plies a deal. While struggling to teach one of Big Gates’ artists the hook for a song, Plies recorded his own as a demonstration. The MC was attending the University of Southern Florida in the late ‘90s while his brother, Ronell “Big Gates” Levatte, was launching hip-hop label Big Gates, and soon found himself in front of the mic. Born Algernod Washington, Plies was raised in Fort Myers, Florida.