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Borrowing its squeaky foundation from Lil’ Scrappy & Trillville’s Lil Jon-produced 2004 single “Some Cut,” Mvntana’s supercharged four-on-the-floor anthem packs the outsized boom of a certified jock jam while crystallizing the heartbeat of the club.

The Queens-bred producer achieves this feat by pairing heavy metal guitar and a tenacious bass kick with one simple directive, “arch in ya back.”

The refrain, which hearkens back to 2-Live Crew’s “Face Down Ass Up” in tone and cadence, is clear: if you do not have the urge to leave it all on the dancefloor, you will be forced to make room for those that do because they literally do not stop.

Written by
Karas Lamb

Borrowing its squeaky foundation from Lil’ Scrappy & Trillville’s Lil Jon-produced 2004 single “Some Cut,” Mvntana’s supercharged four-on-the-floor anthem packs the outsized boom of a certified jock jam while crystallizing the heartbeat of the club.

The Queens-bred producer achieves this feat by pairing heavy metal guitar and a tenacious bass kick with one simple directive, “arch in ya back.”

The refrain, which hearkens back to 2-Live Crew’s “Face Down Ass Up” in tone and cadence, is clear: if you do not have the urge to leave it all on the dancefloor, you will be forced to make room for those that do because they literally do not stop.

Written by
Karas Lamb

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