The song held the number-one spot on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for one week, and topped the Canadian RPM national singles chart on the same date. Labelle's version of "Lady Marmalade" was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2003.[1] and was ranked number 479 on Rolling Stone's list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.
Death @ a Ke$ha fan trying to go in for trivial ****. Whether it was #1 for a week or 20, it was still a hit and way more known than ANY Ke$ha song. No one will be covering any of her forgotten trash 20 years from now. I put a million on that.
Why haven't you yet? I for sure thought you would have saw her @ RIR.
And in 2010. She's like a G0D there.
Watching her perform live is a religious experience tbh.
It's inspiring.
Because I live far away from where all interesting things happen.
I did try to buy a ticket for her RIR concert but it sold out before that.
Opening with layers of beatboxing and snatches of vocals to build the beat, it soon morphs into a massive riot of falsetto, their two voices intertwining so much they seem to blend into one loved-up mass.