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1. b-more club dancin
The way people dance in the clubs in Baltimore Maryland.In B-more it is also called rockin off, or shakin off
b-more club dancing

aye!!! yo was rockin off
2. rockin' off
The matter of dancing to a fast paced song, often mixed off an actual song such as the Spongebob Squarepants theme song, where you perform criss-cross & hopping movements. Not as easy as it sounds. Popularly knows as the spongebob dance, rockin'/roccin', or b-more dancing.
Yo, look at tommy rockin' off over there!
Yeah, I know. His spongebob is on point!
3. wu tang
A crazy dance that u dance to club music
"yo she killed the wu tang" or " The school is havin a wu tang contest"
4. Cameo
An outlandish, in-your-face stage presence, a strange sense of humor, and a hard-driving funk sound that criss-crossed a few musical boundaries earned Cameo countless comparisons to Parliament/Funkadelic in their early days. However, Cameo eventually wore off accusations of being derivative by transcending their influences and outlasting almost every single one of them. Throughout the '70s and '80s, the group remained up with the times and occasionally crept ahead of them, such that they became influences themselves upon younger generations of R&B and hip-hop acts. By the time the group's popularity started to fizzle in the late '80s, a series of R&B chart hits -- ranging from greasy funk workouts to synthesized funk swingers to dripping ballads -- was left in their wake. Further separating Cameo from their forebears, they didn't have a diaper-clad guitarist. Instead, they had a codpiece-wearing lead vocalist.

That vocalist was Larry Blackmon. In 1974, the ex-Juilliard student and New York City club-goer instigated a funk band with a membership of 13 called the New York City Players. Blackmon, Tomi Jenkins, and Nathan Leftenant formed the group's nucleus. The Casablanca label signed the group to their Chocolate City offshoot, and shortly after that, the group changed its name to Cameo. Their excellent debut album, 1977's Cardiac Arrest, was highlighted by four singles. Three of those hit the Billboard R&B chart: "Rigor Mortis" (number 33), "Funk Funk" (number 20), and "...
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by VaderCoW Aug 26, 2005 add a video
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