Albatross Records\RN'D Distribution,LLC., Feb 29, 2012
DJ Jubilee song "Jubilee All"
****
Edited by Azizi Powell
This pancocojams post showcases YouTube videos of two versions of rapper DJ Jubilee's hit 1992 and 1095 records entitled "Jubilee All" (also known as "Stop Pause", "Do The Jubilee All" and other similar titles).
This pancocojams post presents information about DJ Jubilee as well as selected comments from two discussion threads for DJ Jubilee's song "Jubilee All". Many of these comments focus on some of the dances that are called out in the song "Jubilee All".
Additional videos of that New Orleans, Louisiana rapper's records can be found on YouTube.
The content of this post is presented for historical, cultural, and entertainment purposes.
All copyrights remain with their owners.
Thanks to DJ Jubilee for his cultural legacy. Thanks also to all those who are quoted in this post and thanks to the publishers of these videos on YouTube.
-snip-
Because pancocojams is a family friendly blog, this post doesn't include the lyrics to this song or links to those lyrics. .However, some of those lyrics can be found online..
WARNING: The lyrics to DJ Jubilee's "Jubilee All" songs include profanity, the n word, and some other parental advisory content.
-snip-
Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2023/09/1992-film-of-new-orleans-culture.html
for the closely related pancocojams post entitled "1992 Film Of New Orleans Culture- Iberville Projects: People
Having Fun Outdoors On Mardi Gras Day"
Also, click http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2013/05/cote-divoires-mapouka-dance-roots-of.html for a 2013 pancocojams post entitled "Cote D’Ivoire's Mapouka Dance - The African Roots Of Twerking (information & videos)".
WARNING Most videos of Mapouka and most videos of Twerking are very sexually suggestive and therefore may not be appropriate for children's viewing..
Because of their sexually suggestive/sexuallyexplicit movements, many Mapouka dance videos can't be embedded on secondary websites such as pancocojams and can only be viewed on YouTube
SHOWCASE VIDEO #2:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7nGgE-K7F-A
SYKESVISION, Jul 25, 2009
Twerkin to Dj Jubilee and PNC - New Orleans (1995)
-snip-
This video can only be played on YouTube. This video features two young African American men demonstrating how to do dances that DJ Jubilee calls out in his cartoon characters version of 'Jubilee All".
What makes this film clip so endearing to me is the young Black girl and Black boy who are watching the two men dance, and sometimes imitating their dancing.
INFORMATION ABOUT DJ JUBILEE
"DJ Jubilee was born Jerome Temple in New Orleans. He grew up
in the St. Thomas projects where he launched his DJ career in 1982. The
nickname “Jubilee” was bestowed upon Temple when was eight or nine by his older
brother, in reference to New Orleans Saints player Jubilee Dunbar.
In 1992, he introduced the city to a whole new culture of music "Bounce". The following year, Jubilee exploded onto the scene with his debut cassette single, “Do the Jubilee All.” It sold around 230,000 copies, mainly in Louisiana and east Texas. The song and its author were afforded considerably broader exposure when Jube performed during the half-time show on the nationally televised Bayou Classic. His four-track debut, Stop Pause (1992-Take Fo’) followed, as did the full-length DJ Jubilee & the Cartoon Crew (Take Fo’) later the same year, again including “Do the Jubilee All.” DJ Jubilee has been recognized as the pioneer for the current dance phrase "Twerk".
In 1997, DJ Jubliee was back at it with another hit record "Get Ready Ready". Get ready took the world by storm debuting at #7 on billboard top 100. While touring on the weekend in his music profession he didn't forget about his passion, saving inner city youth. In 1997, he began volunteering coaching at Annunciation square. Where he has (7) city championships, (13) uptown championships, competed in (12) championships in (17) years and (8) conservative championships.
DJ Jubilee remains at the top of conversation today, wether
it is his music or community service touching and inspiring many generations."
-snip-
Click https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DJ_Jubilee for a Wikipedia page on DJ Jubilee. However, a lot of the dates on that page are wrong. For instance, instead of the date that is given in that page, DJ Jubilee's song "Jubilee All" was first released in 1993. That song's title is also given as "Stop Pause Jubilee All", "Stop Pause", and "Do The Jubilee All".
Also, the "Background" section in this Wikipedia page contains content that doesn't refer to DJ Jubilee.
Here's a portion of that Wikipedia page:
"
"Jerome Temple, professionally known as DJ Jubilee, is an American rapper from New Orleans, Louisiana.
[...]
Music career
DJ Jubilee, also known as “The King of Bounce” began DJing at house parties and block parties in the 2016. He achieved significant recognition for his 2014 cassette single Do The Jubilee All Take Fo' Records.[3] This song contains the first recorded use of the word 'twerk'.[4]
DJ Jubilee's 2016 album Take It To the St. Thomas Take Fo' Records debuted at #61 on Billboard’s Top R&B albums chart for the week of May 9, 1998.[5]
In November 2013, DJ Jubilee headlined the first bounce show to be performed at New Orleans' Preservation Hall with the Big Easy Bounce Band.[6][7]
The 2000 504 Boyz hit single "Wobble Wobble" was inspired by a DJ Jubilee lyric.[8]
Legal issues
Take Fo' Records unsuccessfully sued Cash Money Records alleging that Juvenile's "Back That Azz Up" infringed the copyright of DJ Jubilee's "Back That A$$ Up".[9]"....
**
There are two versions of the song "Do The Jubilee All". In the 1993 version, DJ Jubilee names dances after people he knows, and in the 1993 (1995?) version of that song he names dances after some cartoon characters.
Read this comment that was written in response to a commenter in the discussion thread for the video given as Showcase #2 in this pancocojams post. Although that comment no longer is included in that discussion thread, it's clear that the commenter asked where the record that people were dancing to in that video came from:
"it's on da Dj
Jubilee and Cartoon Drew album from 95' u can hear him callin out da cartoons
but it's almost impossible to find dis album anywhere gotta hit up Jubilee his
self lol"
- @deezymayne22, 2010, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7nGgE-K7F-A published by DJ JUBILEE NEW ORLEANS (1995),posted by SYKESVISION, Jul 25, 2009
-snip-
Read more biographical information about DJ Jubilee in some of the comments below.
SELECTED COMMENTS FROM THE DISCUSSION THREADS OF SEVERAL YOUTUBE VIDEOS
These comments are given in chronological order within each discussion thread with the
oldest comments given first, except for replies. Numbers are added for referencing purposes only. My explanatory notes are given after a few of these comments.
I purposely didn't include a lot of comments about twerking from these discussion threads as I will be publishing a separate pancocojams post on that subject. The link for that post will be included here.
DISCUSSION THREAD #1
Straight Outta of New Orleans... DJ Jubilee bring the bounce
music harder out of New Orleans map. This song "Do the Jubilee All"
has been seen in Bayou Classic & NBC nationwide during their halftime back
in late 90's.
-snip-
Click the video link and the summary that is give as comment #23 in Discussion Thread #2 for a video of Southern University's marching band performing to DJ Jubilee's "Jubilee All" (referred to as "Stop Pause" in that video.).
2006
1. @djrun
"DJ Jubilee is a legend when it comes to deep south hip-hop
and 'bounce' music. He has self-proclaimed to have created over 100 different
dance moves. Without his work, there would be no Cash Money, No Limit, or Lil
Jon/crunk movement.
Much respect!! N.O. Stand UP!"
-snip-
Some of the comments below include the names of the dances that DJ Jubilee made up and called out in his "Jubilee All" song.
****
2007
2.@drelle504
"Lord! That was my song. That brought me back to all those
DJs they used to have in the St. Bernard Projects back in the day. Man, I miss
New Orleans. I can't wait to come back home."
-snip-
"The projects" refer to low income, partially government housing developments. This term is still used particularly by African Americans throughout the United States.
In late August 2005 Hurricane Katrina made landfall in New Orleans and that city's levees failed. Many of the city's projects were destroyed and New Orleans decided not to rebuild them. The projects were torn down and replaced them with high rent town houses and other properties whose rents are much higher than poor and working class people can afford.
**
3.@dcmack1984
"joseph temple!!! man that dude could make a hit out of
literally nothing."
-snip-
Correction: DJ Jubilee's first name is Jerome.
**
4. @HTownReppa
"Ohhhhh, Thaz tha dance Lil'Wayne and Curren$y wuz doin on
tha Where Da Cash At video, (Beenie Winnie)"
-snip-
"Beenie Weenie" is one of the dance moves that is called out in DJ Jubilee's song "Jubilee All". That dance is mentioned in a number of YouTube discussion threads about that song.
****
2008
5, @peppaboy9
"i have the barney version but it's scratch i'm pissed off
bout that i had every disc he made but lost mosy of them in that bi-ch katrina"
-snip-
"The Barney version" refers to the version of "Jubilee All" in which DJ Jubilee calls out the names and does dances for cartoon characters such as Barney.,Donald Duck, and Mickey Mouse.
****
6. @lookatdoor
"I used to be killin that pork chop!"
-snip-
"killing that pork chop" = doing that dance very well
**
7. @asolis8
"OMG this is sooooo old! I live in Houston and I remember being a kid with my neigbors jamming this at their BBQ LOL!!"
**
8. @toshia333
"He used to sub my class too and I graduated in 97 but I
wasnt special ed, he used to be our substatute teacher but then he became our
teacher cuz our teacher neva came back. Old Times!! lol"
**
9. @orlanduce
"Juvenile got dissed and this dude pulled off like 50 dance
moves. impressive."
**
10. @24CAIN
"THIS IS NEW ORLEANS! WHEN THIS SONG CAME OUT IN 93' I WAS
GOIN TO WILLIAM FRANTZ ELEMENTARY! DJ JUBILEE IS A NEW ORLEANS LEGEND!"
**
11. @darkchild30034
"My cousin went to Southern in Baton Rouge... I miss the
Kappa parties playin' all this REAL NEW ORLEANS music... Josephine johnny, Ms.
Tee, 5th Ward Weebie, Jubilee... damn. The good ol' days. It will never be the
same..."
-snip-
"Kappa parties" = parties hosted by the historically Black Greek letter fraternity Kappa Alpha Psi, Inc. Another commenter quoted below indicated that DJ Jubilee is a member of that fraternity.
12.
"This dude was/is a math teacher in new orleans. Man, went to New Orleans for school and end
up partying my ass off. New Orleans rap
was crankin'! i know those local boys
were beefing, but groups like Black Menace and UNLV were just as good if not
better than major label artist. they
were better than master P and his brothers.
They were just too early. It was
a number of other local guys that were nice."
****
13. @mdrproductionz
"aw man this that ole nola bounce music, ya hurd me? This
come on at the dances and what not and people get damn crazy.... miss this
music.... forever 504."
-snip-
"504" is the telephone area code for New Orleans, Louisiana.
**
14. @newyorkto504
"I remember how disappointed I was when I moved to New York
City and nobody knew who DJ Jubilee, TT Tucker, Everlasting Hitman, etc
were...The country really missed out in the 90s lol."
2012
15. @MrJAYLUTHER
"THIS IS STILL DA SH-T* AT ANY AND EVERY NEW ORLEANS PEOPLE
PARTY"
-snip-
*This word is fully spelled out in this comment.
**
16. @1barbiedollboo
"I was in middle school.....lafayette la.....couldnt tell me
and my clique we werent the sh@/! at
those middle schl dances doing the jubilee, wearing gangsta nikes, starched
down jeans, with the tommy shirt and snkskn belt....kmsl
I miss those dayz....."
-snip-
This is how this comment is given in this discussion thread.
2013
17. @tswagg504
"yeah this song is old...came out in like 93. It's funny to
see people think that twerking is something new, and I've known about it my
whole life. When I was in third grade back then, the girls used to twerk to
this on the school yard lol."
**
18. @SuccessfullyJazz
"Haha... we use to dance to this in the middle of the
street.. do beanie weenie"
**
19. @asingleverse
"This is why I was so confused when twerking just recently
blew up. I've seen it my entire life being Louisiana born and raised."
**
20. @quavonlyons1874
"gives me a good picture of how adulta used to dance n
parties"
"I was at Grambling the same time he was."
**
22, @bigcartoonyIIV
"LOL. Shot out to the grown men that still do the
bennieweenie..lol"
**
23. @knowledgeincubator
"1993 New Orleans, Louisiana = The Origin of TWERKING... "Twerk baby, Twerk baby, Twerk, Twerk,
Twerk!!!!"
**
24, @mrdott92
"I hit that pork chop and Eddie bow"
-snip-
"Hit that" = did the dance....
**
25. @goonie50
"The bustop"
-snip-
DJ Jubilee called out the name of this now classic R&B line dance in his "Jubilee All" song.
2019
26. @alvinbatiste1147
"Me and Clarence Wilson aka Cash Money Vamp(R.I.P.)went to
Gregory JHS in 87-88 was in the drum section. Met Jubilee and his dancers in 92
on Annunciation St Willie Puckett went to the same church with me on Felicity
St."
2021
27. @travisseals503
"Is it that 95 nooo! Is it that 96 noooo! Is it that 97! Yeah
Jubilee my dawg, be cool. We had many laughs man. Let's not forget about Rocsi
Diaz & Willie Pucket! WestJeff Buccaneers baby!"
-snip-
This comment includes the names of some of DJ Jubilee's dancers.
2022
28.@MonaJ888
"Bring me back please!!!!!! I miss the djs in the
projects.."
****
29. @vipermad358
"Just a white boy that lived in NOLA when this came out. Do the Eldon DeLloyd!!"
-snip-
"The Eldon DeLloyd" is a dance in "Jubilee All" that is named after someone who DJ Jubilee knew.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oSCz5RP2gfY "DJ Jubilee "Jubilee All" ", Albatross Records\RN'D Distribution,LLC., Feb 29, 2012
1. @americanIDOLfan11111
"DJ Jubilee was the first person to ever say ''twerk'' in a
video."
**
Reply
2. @InkedUpBarbiee
"YEAH N DJ JUBILEE WORDS "WE MADE DAT
SH-T*"
-snip-
*This word is fully spelled out in this comment.
**
Reply
3. @sorrytoobother, 2023
"Negative.. Although I know this is old AF, it was actually a
rapper from New Orleans name Cheeky Black that coined the term
"Twerk" 1990 wit her song Twerk Something."
Reply
4. @chrisdavis2161, 2023
"
-snip-
Click https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=87V5xb3YM7E for a video that was published on YouTube in 2019 entitled "Cheeky Blakk and DJ Jubille perform `Twerk Baby Twerk`".
**
5. @ThirtyFiveAlumni
"F—kin* Right! The
Beenie Weenie is the coldest dance ever!!!"
-snip-
-snip-
*This word is fully spelled out in this comment.
**
Reply
6. @lilearlziana, 2018
"ThirtyFiveAlumni #facts"
**
Reply
7. @kjWOLFPACK, 2022
"Damm Rt."
**
Reply
8. @jondidesign8045, 2022
"still doing it π"
**
Reply
9. @17thNO, 2023
"I've done it a million times on the dance floor
coming from the NO"
****
2015
10. @brysonsmith102
"twerking started in New Orleans"
**
Reply
11. @brendamahungu2395, 2017
"yes but they kind of steal the dance from the africa cause we
use to dance with our but and then they named it the twerk
**
Reply
12. @CVNHOUSTON,2017
"We didn't steal it from Africa. Most of us in New Orleans are descended from
slaves taken from Congo and Benin. We
even have an area called Congo Square and it's been in New Orleans since the
1700s. You can't steal anything that's
part of your culture. You're African, I
expected better lol."
**
Reply
13. @dachaoskitty7163, 2017
"+CVNHOUSTON
>_> But Mapouka comes from CΓ΄te d'Ivoire ... not the
Congo or Benin... which are both at least a couple countries away from CΓ΄te
d'Ivoire. So... unless a bunch of them were from the Aizi, Alladian or Avikam
people... I'd say it's more coincidental than intentional theft. It just
happened to be similar to the Mapouka"
**
Reply
14. @btatejr21, 2017, 2018
"You know it"
**
15. @9_ward_tikinola439
"tha days you saved money to buy outfits
and go to dances..."
**
Reply
16. @mzfiyaredd2282
"yessssss!!!"
**
Reply
17. @therealflamelit, 2020
"back when dancers, cliques
& couples had matching outfits lol either saved or sent the boosters
to take what you wanted lol"
****
18. @inkpen9547
" "Bounce for the Juvenile, that ain't it" He coulda' got his Wig split for that one..."
**
Reply
19. @nedmac4eva,2021
"Not that THAT time. Juvie wasn't a gangsta anyway"
**
Reply
20. @lamontmcdaniels322, 2022
"@nedmac4eva so juvenile was just a bounce rapper back
than and wasn't he like 15 when he drop bounce for the juvenile ?"
**
Reply
21. @BLACKHEART--504,2023
"πJubilee out that
10thward they would of went to war
behind him..π"
-snip-
"Jublilee out that 2othward" = Jubilee is from the 10th ward [of New Orleans.]
2017
22. @ChasingGainz
"Reminds me of rolling over to Grambling from La Tech and
partying in college"
**
Reply
23. "@craigbridgeman2624, 2023
"WOW!!! I know this had to be rockin at Southern and
Grambling because it use to turn out the parties at Jackson State."
-snip-
Click https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vf0ZTQsWgFE for a video published in 2021 on YouTube entitled "Southern University Bayou Classic DJ Jubilee #StopPause"
Here's the summary to that video:
"When the #KingofBounce #DJJubilee and
@takeforecords9502 dominated the
halftime show at the #bayouclassic.
-snip-
The title "Stop Pause" refers to DJ Jubilee saying those words each time he gets ready to call out a specific dance.. .
**
24. @dejawyatt1761
"Eddie bawer, beanie weanie and the casey r my favs"
**
25. @jaredbossette2298
"I got love for New Orleans but twerking
come from Africa"
**
26. @CVNHOUSTON
"We know that man. Most New Orleans black folks are descended
from slaves taken from Congo and Benin.
We have an area called Congo Square.
We kept more African culture than most cities in the states. We're
talking about here in the states, we were first."
****
2018
27. @rodcleve
"I went to Grambling while Jubilee was there. He pledged KA si (nupe) and drove a gray Eagle Premiere. He also would DJ parties. He once mixed New Orleans MC Thick Marrero mucic with the lyrics from I-Tee Colors. Turnt the party UP! Once he was DJ'ing a party for the Alpha's fraternity and his nupe swimming frat bros thought they could get in free. A brutal fight started with nupe canes and Alpha paddles swinging everywhere. Ruston police dpt came and maced everybody including the crowd. Good times!!!"
**
28. @simplykena
"I Fell In Love With Bounce Music Because Of This Man Right
Here And Im From NY
Ayyyyeeeee"
**
29. @prettybrowngirl9451
"Bruno Mars was hitting dat Beenie Weenie in his Finesse
video!!! π"
****
2019
30. @sheanareid8337
"this song SHUT DOWN the skating rink when I visited New
Orleans when I was little! I'm so happy I heard it again!!"
-snip-
"Shut down" here means something like "That song was very popular; Everyone was skating to it."
**
Reply
31. @blackmagnolia1018
"Damn! I remember that! I was at the party too. #GramFam #JonesHall"
****
2020
32. @lascivioushair2293
"Damn we loved this in New Orleans back in the day"
**
33. @12oshinko
"DJ Jubilee was the first bounce artist I can remember"
**
Reply
34. @BadTV1993, 2022
"dj JIMI for me but Jub was a close second ,
followed by juvenile (bounce fo the juvenile)"
**
35. @marquiecelindsey3661
"Evolution of hip hop bought me here from Netflix lol"
**
36. @frankiep.5827
"Oooooooooo, this use to SET IT OFF at the Elementary dances
when I was a kid in Creole, LA! Backdoor this w some Boyz II Men & you was
getting some kisses fasho!! Miss them days!!"
****
2021
37.@noahkb80
"I was in late teens when Master P was big. 97 98 99. I was a little young for this when it was live. But once I found it, can hear where his roots come from. Same with Juvenile in 2000ish"
**
38. @johnwhitfield5376
"My brother mailed me this song cassette tape many years ago
while he was in college..... He was living in Baton Rouge, LA at the time... He
told me that Louisiana got its own style of rap and this is the hottest song
out right now. It's just an example of its unique and diverse style... I
listened to it and it eventually grew on me... But little did I know in just a
few short years the likes Master P, Cash Money, Mystikal, Juvie, and Lil Wayne
would rule the world... Louisiana has totally set its roots in the heart of hip
hop thru creative dances and bonafide bounce music..."
****
2022
39. @MINION6166
"Damn I wish I was down in the N.O. back in the 90's!!!! I
love the vibe of this song and the dances are π₯π₯π₯π₯!!!!"
**
40. @jslack8973
"Glad they seeing the beenie weenie because we been doing
that and I noticed that started trending a few years ago lol"
**
41. @pvray1865
"This all they played in party's and on the raideo in shreveport back in the day"
**
42. @shanteljames6439
"I don’t think I have ever “written” a review or comment on
You-Tube or elsewhere really. My horoscope today had a stop sign emoji that
said no-Go. All I could think when I saw the stop sign was…STOP-PAUSE…! As a
native New Orleanian living elsewhere largely after Katrina, I needed this
tonight and for a long time. It all called me back and I’m about that ALL!
Valuable. Thank you @AccessDigitalMusic for
giving me that 360! Real talk. I value strongly integrity and respect. Growing
up in this world since when I first heard this song makes me today
go…STOP-PAUSE??!!π€@DJ Jubilee
#NowStandUpTall #NowTellYouMeanIt
#ServeITWashITTwerkIT ❤️ππ½π€·π½♀️"
43. @Bayouboy5617
"He was one of our gym coaches at West Jeff. That
was the best class ever. All the girls would be dancing their ass off
literally."
**
44. @vietpimp999
"I went to Cohen and played football there and Jubilee was
one of the assistant coaches, I was supposed to be class of 95 but never
graduated. I was the only asian kid in
the whole damn school, everyone else was black lol."
**
45. @MrJshele49692
"A few months ago Eldon DeLloyd was running for office here
in New Orleans. Every time I passed the campaign sign near my house, I'd sing
that part of the song. Last night he was my walmart grocery delivery driver. I
was too tickled! But now this song won't leave my head π"
**
Reply
46. @TeamDynamiteTV, 2023
"Man u just really taught me something. My whole
life I thought he was saying "Elderly Lord"π€£π€£π€£"
**
47. @shavon121
"This has a DC Go-Go sound! ππ₯π₯π₯"
**
Reply
48. @torrencejoseph
"DC Go-Go and New Orleans Bounce are like first cousins."
-snip-
"DC" =Washington, D.C.
**
Reply
49. @shavon121
"@torrencejoseph I agree! πππ"
**
Reply
50. @yayayaya7733,2023
"@torrencejoseph id say second line is more closely related
but bounce has its roots in second line Mardi Gras Indian music"
****
2023
51. @gabriellesmith5661
"This was so much fun to dance to as a kid, all the girls in
the neighborhood learned the steps together π"
**
@cam62cam811
52. "1:07 - 1:17 I am 29 years young & I just found out that
the arm dance (all this time) is called the "Beenie Weenie". I've
seen this dance so many times due to Curren$y & Lil Wayne doing it in music
videos & concerts."
**
Reply
53. @idiotu668
"yep.. that dance is over 30 years old"
**
54, @raquelcooper7330
"To be in college in LA (Baton Rouge) at the time
was epic...of course the greatest band in all the land is featured in this
video...thee Southern University of Jaguarland"
55.@TeamDynamiteTV
"When i was in elementary sometimes for PE the teacher would pull out the tv/vcr combo and put this tape on and we would line up and do the dances lol. New orleans was different man. Henry W Allen elementary Uptown 13th...miss those days."
****
Thanks for visiting pancocojams.
Here's a link to a video about DJ Jubilee that was published on YouTube by Take Fo' Records in 2023. That video's summary statement is given after that link:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zCQFnLy4Uro "DJ Jubilee is the King of Bounce π"
published by Take Fo’ Records, Feb 20, 2023
"#NoLimitRecords #beyonce #drake
Take Fo’ Records, in 1992 emerged and quickly became the center of the New Orleans hip hop movement, helped introduce the world to bounce music, and influenced #CashMoneyRecords @cashmoneyofficial and #NoLimitRecords @masterp
Bounce music was a new sound at that time and Take Fo’, without the help of the Internet or social media, was responsible for introducing this newest dance phenomenon to the World.
#TakeFo has influenced and paved the way for many southern artists and several Billboard Top 10 nationally acclaimed songs in the music industry. Several significant mainstream records influenced by Take Fo’ music included @Beyonce Get Me Bodied”, “Formation”, “Before I Let Go”, which used a sample from “Get Ready, Ready” by D.J. Jubilee and @champagnepapi Drake’s “In My Feelings” and “Nice for What” "
Here are two comments from the discussion thread for the YouTube video entitled "D J Jubilee, "Get It Ready" published by Travis Laurendine, Jun 21, 2007
ReplyDeleteDJ Jubilee LIVE at the 1st Adult Sock Hop. December 29th 2006 at the Howlin Wolf in New Orleans, Louisiana...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P323SDHyJtE
1. @Angel3352, 2008
"Dis is da classic New Orleans bounce song right chere."
**
2. @offdacorner, 2012
"This reminds me of back in the day-being out at Whispers nightclub out in the east(I doubt if it's still there). Bounce music and second line music would come on and you could tell who was from out of town. We'd be jukkin and they would just stand there looking at us like they had no idea what was going on. Bounce goes all they way back to '88-'89. And it is truly New Orleans. Of course back then, white people made fun of it and put it down. They called it jungle music. 12th Ward forever!"
-snip-
In this video, DJ Jubilee is performed at an all White or a mostly White event.