Robin Thicke's "Blurred Lines" isn't just sitting atop the Billboard Hot 100 for a seventh straight week. The sexy, controversial hit is dominating the charts for radio play and digital songs. Read More »
Bill Clinton continued his run as one of the most fun figures in pop culture by crooning Robin Thicke's no. 1 single "Blurred Lines" in a video that has quickly gone viral. Read More »
The music video for Robin Thicke's "Blurred Lines" has garnered plenty of attention both positive (in its sheer number of hits received) and negative (in accusations that it promotes misogyny with its scantily clad models gallivanting around in their skivvies). The video has inspired commercials (such as Thicke promoting Beats products using the exact same schtick) and countless parodies. One Seattle group finally managed to reverse the gender roles without adding commentary on unfair gender relations. Read More »
Before the American debut of his much-anticipated new album 2013 Blurred Lines, R&B singer Robin Thicke has been unveiling new songs from the album one at a time. Recent days have seen the release of “Ain’t No Hat 4 That,” “Ooo La La” and “Feel Good.” Today’s offering is the throwback to all sorts of old dance and R&B, the monstrous “Get In My Way.” Read More »
Robin Thicke’s Blurred Lines album has debuted at No. 1 in the UK, knocking Jay Z’s Magna Carta Holy Grail from the top British spot. Read More »
Robin Thicke gets accused of biting Justin Timberlake a lot. But the Blurred Lines crooner might owe Daft Punk and Pharrell at least a high-five for "Ooo La La," an unpretentious slab of pure disco revivalism. Thicke decided to dive into this schmaltzy track with both feet, convincingly repeating "You can have my body, you can have my soul" with nary a wink, much in the same way Pharrell committed to tracks like "Get Lucky" and "Lose Yourself To Dance." Read More »
Interscope will not let us forget that Robin Thicke has an album coming out. Today's daily dose of Blurred Lines (set to be Thicke's biggest album yet based on the titular chart-topping single) is called "Feel Good" and serves as a nice descriptor of Thicke's recent radio-ready output. Read More »
As pop music fans and chart followers can expect, Robin Thicke's sexy, controversial "Blurred Lines" falls at No. 1 for a sixth straight week. Daft Punk's "Blurred Lines" sits blocked from the top spot in the country at No. 2 for fives weeks in a row. Miley Cyrus' "We Can't Stop" is the youngest high rising song, with three weeks at No. 3. Imagine Dragons' "Radioactive" dropped from No. 3 to No. 4 when "We Can't Stop" rocketed up the charts, and has been in that spot for three weeks as well. Read More »
In a move that brings Robin Thicke and Justin Timberlake one step closer to doing the "Fu-sion Ha," Thicke has released his disco-y throwback "Ain't No Hat 4 That" less than a week after JT's controversial "Take Back The Night" dropped. The track off Blurred Lines was co-written by none other than Thicke's father, "Growing Pains" star Alan Thicke. Read More »
cdasv Read More »
Robin Thicke recently broke into the world of top 40 with his smash hit "Blurred Lines." In an interesting twist, he has decided to return to his roots (sultry bedroom jams) by taking another summertime smash (for those who didn't get their fill of it last summer), Icona Pop's "I Love It", and turning it into a panty-dropper. Read More »
In which Robin Thicke bites a piano riff/vocal melody out of Elton John's dreams and adds a little uplifting Blue-eyed soul. While "The Good Life" isn't as immediately attention-grabbing as some of Thicke's recent output, the Blurred Lines track isn't a bad listen. Read More »