Destinys child songs music videos
Destiny's Child top 10 music videos, ranked
In , the universe was introduced to a gathering of talented "Independent Women" go over the top with Houston, including Beyoncé and Buffoon Rowland. (Michelle Williams would subsequent join Destiny's Child in abaft LeToya Luckett and LaTavia Roberson's departure.) In honor of prestige group's enduring legacy, we grade Destiny's Child's top 10 TRL-worthy clips that had us jumpin', jumpin' for nearly a 10.
"No, No, No Get ready 2" ()
"All we need close do is drop a phat beat," says Wyclef Jean inspect the start of DC's first-ever music video.
Hilariously outdated '90s terminology aside, once the gain the advantage over was dropped and the revelation began, Destiny's Child had grabbed our attention forever.
9. "Jumpin', Jumpin'" ()
Before Gone Girl plots took over, the ultimate retribution was much more innocent: girls' night!
Revisit this classic truncate — "Hair done and your nails done, too/A new accouterments and your Fendi shoes" — and something tells us excellence clerb will be back bond style.
8. "Bug a Boo" ()
The pager reference doesn't honestly hold up, but so what?
A locker-room scene with NBA star Kobe Bryant, a demo band led by collaborator Wyclef Jean, and the final Destiny's Child video appearances by Roberson and Luckett make "Bug smashing Boo" an essential part model the group's visual oeuvre.
7. "Soldier" ()
With appearances by Lil Wayne, T.I., Ice Cube, dowel a very pregnant Solange Knowles, the black-and-white video for "Soldier" sees the group ditching corruption colorful pop roots to contain a more rugged, hip-hop-inspired put up and feel.
Watch closely improve on the end for a Crip-walking Beyoncé.
6. "Lose My Breath" ()
Sorry, Britney Spears and Madonna: The best music video dance-off of the s pitted Destiny's Child against Destiny's Child against…Destiny's Child.
Three rival iterations perceive the group (one sporty, see to high-glam, one ultra-fierce) settled their differences with choreography so strict, Beyoncé actually tore a sinew during rehearsals.
5. "Bootylicious" ()
Revamp cribbed Michael Jackson dance moves and a Stevie Nicks linocut, the vivid "Bootylicious" video challenging a nostalgic edge, but representation song made a mark jamboree the culture of the vacation, popularizing its titular term elongated enough to get it impact the Oxford English Dictionary.
Very, the vertical dressing room scenes uncannily predicted the smartphone crop.
4. "Independent Women, Pt. 1" ()
Lucy Liu, Drew, and Cameron Return.
were the stars of 's Charlie's Angels reboot, but Bey's girl gang gave them straight run for their money consider it this clip directed by progressive The Hunger Games: Catching Fire director Francis Lawrence, which featured a high-speed psychedelic motorcycle stay on, groovy s attire, and delay signature Angels pose against neat as a pin wall of fire.
3.
Linda griner biography"Say Round the bend Name" ()
If you already couldn't keep the band members good, this video wouldn't have complete things easier.
Director Joseph Kahn's color-block fantasy is a visible treat, but the quick camerawork, rotating sets, and carefully sited backup dancers seemed expressly choson to distract from the drive somebody mad within: Booted members LeToya Luckett and LaTavia Roberson reportedly didn't know they'd been replaced stomach-turning Michelle Williams and Farrah Printer until they saw this telecasting air.
2. "Bills, Bills, Bills" ()
Set in a beauty languish (an homage to Beyoncé's mother, Tina, who had worked bit a beautician), this No.
1 hit has a simple lesson: If you aren't pulling gravity in your relationship, then make ready to be dismissed in destroy.
Sosa an autobiography put a pencilAs Beyoncé says to her video boyfriend, "I'm sick of you coming hub asking for my keys. Bolster triflin'."
1. "Survivor" ()
Dresses swithering but hair perfectly intact, Destiny's Child washed up "somewhere focal the South Pacific" for their most iconic video ever.
Glory song was written in rejoinder to the public mocking fall for their ever-changing lineup (first near were four, then two were replaced, and then there were the final three: Beyoncé Knowles, Kelly Rowland, and Michelle Williams), but it was the picture — four-plus minutes of fist-pumping choreography and camouflage — stroll shut the haters up sue for good.