Songs similar to can i have this dance




















So, what are you waiting for?! Press play on this list of the best feel-good songs and get ready to feel instantly happier. Whether you're recovering from heartbreak , having a stressful day at work funny country songs can help! It doesn't matter if you're rocking out with headphones on or blasting tunes from your car stereo, as long as you're moving and grooving to the rhythm.

This list covers every genre, form pop hits, to funny country sing-a-longs and oldies favorites, so anyone can find a tune here to put a smile on their face. So be warned: After listening to this feel-good playlist, it's going to feel impossible not to smile. Country Life. Design Ideas. Home Maintenance. The least likely runaway smash of all time? With a video now closing in on 2 billion views, Psy is without question a juggernaut-size quirk complete with his natty couture and pony-gallop signature dance.

Simply brilliant. The No. This song was originally written and recorded by Generation X, the punk foursome fronted by Billy Idol, before he remixed and re-released the track as a solo effort in It was a smart move, considering nothing is quite so foolproof as a song about dancing alone From Robyn to Whitney, it's pretty much a power-pop lay-up. After all, there's not one among us who has not felt the ache of loneliness on the dance floor.

Thankfully, with a song as universally beloved as this, it's pretty well guaranteed you'll never fly solo. Rage on, yo. This may be an Usher song, but it bears the unmistakable mark of inimitable Southern rap don Lil Jon. Gwen Stefani dropped her go-to quirky and emo poses on this one, in the process outing herself as a seriously badass dance-floor commando.

Just out of prison and newly signed to Death Row Records, California rapper 2pac was in need of a comeback hit, and he found one in "California Love. Dre, it was one of the most successful songs of 2pac's career, and left no doubt in anyone's mind that California most certainly knew how to party.

How do you turn a six-year-old Swiss cult act into an overnight sensation? Add Matthew Broderick, apparently. No list of party songs would be complete without a head nod to the woman who redefined dance-pop music. From its opening bars, this jam gets it right, appropriately heralding the entrance of Colombian pop royalty with a fanfare of trumpets.

Few are able to meld a savvy hook and a globally-influenced beat as seamlessly as Shakira, which she does here with a salsa sample, a reggaeton pulse and a bilingual assist from Wyclef. But its brash beat would whip a dance floor into frenzied energy anywhere in the world.

A collaboration between Scottish electro house kingpin Calvin Harris and pop superstar Rihanna, "We Found Love" is a perfect storm of massive club sounds and soaring pop hooks. An irrepressible blend of euphoria and despair, the tune sat atop the Billboard Hot for ten non-consecutive weeks, establishing it as RiRi's longest running number-one single. The Beastie Boys' breakout hit was originally meant to poke fun at the drunk antics of meathead party boys, but it ultimately became one of the outfit's best-known anthems.

Given the song's expert blend of brazen, juvenile raps and chunky guitar riffs, it's not hard to see why. Although, years later, Adam Yauch, a. The music industry took a minute to catch wind of Fetty's earworm-machine potential, but once net virality took hold a year after the original release of "Trap Queen," the rise was nothing short of meteoric. The sensitive and soft-hearted love-paean has quickly turned from a quintessential summer soundtrack to a contemporary hits classic—no trap house party is complete without it.

We all are, Miss Jackson, we all are. No matter how late it gets, what better way to keep the party going than the supremely uncool cool of the Bee Gees? So pop open that top button and dust off your disco moves as you surrender to the groove. This hugely anticipated not to mention hyped comeback single from Daft Punk became the summer anthem of This single found the late, great British soul singer Amy Winehouse at the peak of her talents, even as she sang about the depths of her despair.

For her Back to Black album, producer Mark Ronson teamed Winehouse with Brooklyn funk musicians the Dap-Kings, resulting in songs that are as groovy as they are dark. As long as the good times keep going, so will the party, and nothing lights up a dance floor quite like a little disco mirror ball included.

So find yourself a drink and a partner—or rather, bring your laughter, too—and toast the good times with this megahit.

It starts out pretty civilized, with that unmistakable keyboard intro, and lickety-split cymbal beats. I can do the twist! Now tell me baby, do you like it like this? How about a false ending and surprise return? Writhe on, kids! James Brown may not have had the most graceful offstage persona, but the hardest working man in showbiz was a one-man party-starter. We want prenup! Arm me with harmony. What's a hot girl summer? Regardless of the season, it's about doing your thing and not caring what other people think.

Megan Thee Stallion and her summer anthem, embody that ideal. She brings the heat, and this song will make you want to just have a good time and not give a damn.

Put on this track and everyone is the life of the party. Even after its short-lived heyday, TNGHT remains one of electronic music's most potent recent matchups. Bass luminary Lunice's club-rattling beats make a viciously ferocious pairing with the recklessly maximalist synth-frenzy of Kanye-affiliated producer Hudson Mohawke. The single which launched them to trap-mainstay-status consists of just a few elements a looping vocal sample, seismic drums, and a stomping horn riff but together they can make a party sound undoubtedly enormous.

No one can be held responsible for what transpires in the four minutes after the opening string melody of Sisqo's breakout single "Thong Song. For a song about underwear that contains the lyrics "She had dumps like a truck" that's pretty impressive.

Drake is an enigma wrapped in a riddle wrapped in another enigma wearing sweatpants. On the other: makes super-meta, hilarious, on-point videos like this one from , which mocks the very lifestyle it celebrates.

Avoid overheating your brain on conundrums like this by just turning your stereo up really loud, hitching up your low-slung trousers and throwing some shapes. Ellie Walker-Arnott. With the passion, aggression, ennui and insouciance that can only come with being implausibly young, the Arctic Monkeys stomped into public consciousness with this short, snappy teen disco anthem — shot through with thrashing guitars and a northern twang.

Somehow, it still manages to have that same impact 40 years on. Throw this one on about three quarters of the way through your bash, when you need a surefire, hands-in-the-air worldbeater.

A stunningly simple and incredibly famous kick drum sequence introduces this Mancunian classic. What follows that statement of electronic intent is seven minutes of serpentine basslines and deadpan vocals. Is this the only song about masturbation on our list? We doubt it, but it definitely is the most obvious. This John Peel-championed punk classic is as simple and direct as they come. Simple chords, pounding drums and a great, lovelorn melody all combine to make one awesome, pogo-inducing wank anthem.

How many former snipers from the Royal Canadian Navy can be credited with having written a banging synthpop tune? Keisza nailed it and sounded like she had a ball in the process. Gentlemen, good night; ladies, good morning.

All together, now: murderer! When it comes down to it, rap-rock is generally pretty whack, with a few exceptions, the jewel in the crown of which is this glorious mash-up.

Amy Plitt. How wrong they were. Ever been hurt by someone you love? Course you have, so celebrate that kick in the teeth you received by throwing some seriously moody New Romantic shapes to this era-defining synthpop classic.

Nope, no one does, because it was terrible and it tanked. In truth, party-friendly hip hop of this quality might never be heard again. David Fear. We defy anyone to keep their toes from tapping during this mega-hit. Just watch. Go on, let it funk you up. Few contemporary songs make us yearn for the days of the sock hop more than the single that catapulted these New York faves into the big time. On this disco-pop smash, he wants you to be loved, and he especially wants you to get funky.

A single snare hit kicks it all in before a constant barrage of incessant funk guitars and deliciously sexy falsetto vocals take you on a groovy trip around the bedroom. The piano line at the beginning a big shout out to Steve Reich is your cue to grab your real friends, pull them in a big sticky huddle and never, ever let them go.

Small wonder it became a gay pride anthem. An incredible medium-pace groove, lush vocals and tight funk guitars all built for getting frisky at the disco. It really is never too much. Except for Luther burgers. You can probably have too much of those.

James Brown is a sex machine. It's impressive to say the least. But, more than that, it provides the energy that drives this funk masterpiece, backed with taut guitar picks, undulating bass and a fantastically minimalist yet totally titillating drum break. There are other classics we could have picked to honour the Godfather of Soul, but you won't find a more pneumatically powerful example of a funky good time than this.

Adam Feldman. This is one of the most forward-looking, cash-making enterprises in music history. Back in , Prince foretold that when the century turned, DJs around the world would desperately need songs about the occasion.

He nailed it. Now when we hear it, we just want to be back in the last century when everything seemed to be all okay. God we miss you sweet, sweet Prince. Throw this on towards the end of the night as a reward for the party hardcore — it will be messy and beautiful.

Amy Smith. The only unfortunate thing about this banger is that, to really appreciate it and get in the spirit of the video, you'll need to do a quick party change into some hi-vis gear first.

A Holiday Inn, you say? How swanky. Taylor Swift shook off her Disney princess image with this smash. And also that her skin is diamond-encrusted, which is actually pretty awesome and allows her to dance her way through laser sensors and kill you. It really is Britney at her best. And is the perfect excuse to arch your back, turn up your nose haughtily and whimper about feeling misunderstood.

Flowers in the back pocket are optional but advised. Only the English could turn class struggle into one of the greatest moments in modern pop music history. Poor old Technotronic. With this belting slice of dance-pop, the Belgian act helped kick-start hip house, shouted to the world outside of Belgium about New Beat and achieved some impressive chart action reaching Number Two in the UK and US , but never really get remembered much in the music history books.

This song should be listed, like an old building. It should have a blue plaque on it. Written and performed by gents from Wales, Worcester and London and made famous by a load of heroin addicts in Scotland, it sums up our love of fizzing our brains on drugs and gulping down pints of lager, lager, lager.

This - this - is what a UK party is. Danielle Goldstein. How many party songs can boast The Temptations as backing singers?



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