We Just Wanna Party with You

"We Just Wanna Party with You" is the European single from producer Jermaine Dupri and rapper Snoop Doggy Dogg that can be heard on the Men in Black: The Album soundtrack compilation album released in 1997. His first release, "Honey" and his next release "You Make Me Wanna" charted simultaneously with the M.I.B. single. All of them were produced by JD with a short emceeing also done by him.

"We Just Wanna Party with You"
Single by Snoop Doggy Dogg featuring Jermaine Dupri
from the album Men in Black: The Album
ReleasedSeptember 3, 1997 (UK)
Recorded1997
Genre
Length4:32
Label
Songwriter(s)
  • Jermaine Dupri
  • Robert Bell
  • Claydes Smith
  • Calvin Broadus
  • James Taylor
  • George Brown
  • Ronald Bell
  • Robert Mickens
  • Eumir Deodato
  • Richard Westfield
  • Otha Nash
  • Larry Gittens
  • Dennis Thomas
Producer(s)Jermaine Dupri
Snoop Doggy Dogg singles chronology
"Doggfather"
(1997)
"We Just Wanna Party with You"
(1997)
"Still a G Thang"
(1998)

It was the first collaboration of Snoop and JD, that was followed by "Protectors of 1472", "Bow Wow (That's My Name)" and "Welcome to Atlanta (Coast to Coast Remix)".

It was also Snoop's first single outside Death Row as being a single from an album released by Columbia/Sony and produced by JD. Singer Trey Lorenz is featured on the chorus of the song.

It only had a minor success out of the United States (where it had none, only the album charted), particularly in Australia where it stayed 17 weeks on the chart until the next year leaving the top 100 in the first week of February 1998.

The song samples Kool and the Gang's 1982 hit single "Get Down on It". The lyrics include a reference to the 1996 movie The Nutty Professor.

Charts

Chart (1997)Peark
position
Germany (Official German Charts)[1] 82
Australia (ARIA)[2] 28
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders)[3] 7
New Zealand (Recorded Music NZ)[4] 10
Scotland (Official Charts Company)[5] 37
UK R&B (Official Charts Company)[6] 8
UK Singles (Official Charts Company)[7] 20
US R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay (Billboard)[8] 58

Notes

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gollark: Or Great Information Transfer.
gollark: Git stands for GIT Is Tremendous.
gollark: The stages of git clone are: Receive a "pack" file of all the objects in the repo database Create an index file for the received pack Check out the head revision (for a non-bare repo, obviously)"Resolving deltas" is the message shown for the second stage, indexing the pack file ("git index-pack").Pack files do not have the actual object IDs in them, only the object content. So to determine what the object IDs are, git has to do a decompress+SHA1 of each object in the pack to produce the object ID, which is then written into the index file.An object in a pack file may be stored as a delta i.e. a sequence of changes to make to some other object. In this case, git needs to retrieve the base object, apply the commands and SHA1 the result. The base object itself might have to be derived by applying a sequence of delta commands. (Even though in the case of a clone, the base object will have been encountered already, there is a limit to how many manufactured objects are cached in memory).In summary, the "resolving deltas" stage involves decompressing and checksumming the entire repo database, which not surprisingly takes quite a long time. Presumably decompressing and calculating SHA1s actually takes more time than applying the delta commands.In the case of a subsequent fetch, the received pack file may contain references (as delta object bases) to other objects that the receiving git is expected to already have. In this case, the receiving git actually rewrites the received pack file to include any such referenced objects, so that any stored pack file is self-sufficient. This might be where the message "resolving deltas" originated.
gollark: UPDATE: this is wrong.
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