Outkast – Player’s Ball (Christmas Version) Though Snoop and the late Nate Dogg are best known for summertime smashes, on “Santa Claus,” they conjure up the first white Christmas Long Beach has ever seen. Interpolating the title from James Brown’s seminal “Santa Claus Go Straight to the Ghetto,” Snoop Dogg, Nate Dogg, Daz Dillinger, Tray Deee, and Bad Azz bring a little bit of West Coast gangsta rap to the Christmas staple. Snoop Doggy Dogg, Dat N-a Daz, Tray Deee, Bad Azz and Nate Dogg – Santa Claus Goes Straight to the Ghetto But with a shout out to fallen friends and an overall message of love and the importance of family, “A Christmas F_ing Miracle” is the gift that keeps on giving.
Run The Jewels – A Christmas F_king MiracleĪs glacial as the winter freeze, RTJ’s seasonal offering unapologetically questions religion and calls out racism in the US. Its thumping beat flips “Here Comes Santa Claus” to devastating effect.
HIPHOP REMIX SONG MOVIE
Pop Smoke’s “Dior” receives a major remix while Marshmello touches up Future’s “Mask Off” - and that’s just in the first hour.The Southern rapper / actor appeared as DJ Donnie in the 2007 movie Fred Claus in 2007 and, of course, provided a tune for the soundtrack. While many of the remixes here run closer to the standard hip-hop formula of adding a guest verse or two to an existing hit, such as Jack Harlow’s “What’s Poppin” and DaBaby’s “Rockstar” collaboration with Roddy Ricch, it also finds time to squeeze in EDM-themed reworks as well. This list impossibly balances divergent aspects of rap alongside a number of unlikely but surprisingly enjoyable dance music luminaries. Hip Hop Remixes Best Rap Remixes by Electrify Playlists Frequently updated and clocking in at over five hours, the playlist features an eclectic mix of expertly revved-up popular songs new and old like Billie Eilish’s “ Everything I Wanted” and even reimagining of Kid Cudi’s unforgettable hit “Day ‘N’ Night.” Whether you love or loathe Top 40’s hits, this playlist has something for everyone and is sure to get even the shyest in the room out on the dance floor. Rounding up an energizing collection of today’s top songs, the playlist includes music from big-name artists like Major Lazer’s remix of Megan Thee Stallion’s “ Savage” as well as a club-ready rendition of Katy Perry’s recent single “Daisies.” The collection of remixes manages to incorporate all the best new pop music but still cranking up the energy a few notches.Ĭlubs and dance-floors are closed for the foreseeable future, but this playlist is the perfect mix to throw your own living room dance party. Songs like Dua Lipa’s “ Don’t Start Now” have dominated radio stations for months but this playlist gives all today’s hits a rejuvenating facelift. This mix is very bass-heavy, peppered with sampled drum breaks and a thorough East Coast bias, but it always seems to find a way to swing the pendulum back from all the Big L and Nas by incorporating Pharcyde and Compton’s Most Wanted.
For fans of a more throwback, traditional hip-hop sound, this list digs through the crates of some of the ’90s’ most defining moments, pulling out underground gems like Mace Ace’s SlaughtaHouse standout “Style Wars” and A Tribe Called Quest’s slickly reworked “Oh My God” from Midnight Marauders.