
"Harmonic, Syntactic, and Motivic Parameters of Phrase in Hip-Hop". In The Simpsons, season 28, episode 17, " 22 for 30", the song plays during the aftermath of the documentary.In American Dad!, season 13, episode 17, "Criss-Cross Applesauce: The Ballad of Billy Jesusworth", the song plays during a segment where Stan and Roger play one-on-one basketball.Kurtis Blow also recorded a new version of the song with lyrics about the game Dungeons & Dragons for the episode. In 2016, the song was played during an episode of The Goldbergs entitled "Dungeons and Dragons, Anyone?".US Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks Lil' Bow Wow covered the song in 2002, featuring Jermaine Dupri, Fabolous and Fundisha for the Like Mike soundtrack. Moor, Kurt Blow, Shirley Walker, William Waring

Jimmy Bralower, Robert Ford, Paul Anthony, Brian George, Lucien George Jr., Junior Clark, Curt Bedeau, Gerry Charles, James B. Single by Lil' Bow Wow featuring Jermaine Dupri, Fabolous and Fundishaįrom the album Like Mike: Music From the Motion Picture The video game NBA 2K12 used the song during the introduction.

I would do a live performance right after the game to fill the arena." Blow said, "When the song was peaking, the NBA started flying me around to do shows. Nevertheless, the NBA later took an interest in Blow's song and played it at games, as well as creating its own video that featured clips of every player mentioned in the song. Although Blow had wanted the video to include footage of the players mentioned in the song, the National Basketball Association would only provide clearance for use of still photos of Micheal Ray Richardson (who is not mentioned in the lyrics). The video included cameos by rappers The Fat Boys and Whodini. The music video for the song was directed by Michael Oblowitz, who had a $25,000 budget. The song's hook was sung by Alyson Williams, who later had hit songs of her own on the R&B chart. Blow said in 2013, "We wanted the guys we grew up watching who were all out of the league by the time the song came out, and the best of that time." The lyrics consist of rhymed couplets, a structure which has been described as "typical of early-1980s rap". Waring was primarily responsible for choosing which players would be mentioned in the song, but Blow specified that his favorite player, Julius "Dr.

1 sport for African-Americans and nobody has done it yet." Twenty-five famous basketball players are mentioned during the recording. Moore, Jimmy Bralower, and Full Force and recorded by Kurtis Blow, released in 1984 from his album Ego Trip.Īccording to Blow, the idea for the song came from his then-girlfriend (whom he later married), who told him, "You need to make a song about basketball, it's the No. " Basketball" is a rap song written by William Waring, Robert Ford, Kurtis Blow, J.
