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The dance is set to the Harlem Shake dance track by US DJ Baauer.
BBC: Harlem Shake miners fired over safety fears
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Producer Harry Rodrigues, also known as DJ Baauer, and Mad Decent Records declined to comment.
BBC: Harlem Shake artists 'featured without permission'
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Baauer's song reached the top of the US Billboard music charts thanks to its views on YouTube.
BBC: Harlem Shake: Tracking a meme over a month
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Their only constant is the first 30 seconds of a song by a DJ and producer named Baauer.
WSJ: Why the Harlem Shake Matters
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The song "Harlem Shake, " recorded by Brooklyn disc jockey and producer Baauer, is currently No.2 on the Australian singles chart.
NPR: Report: Australian Miners Fired For 'Harlem Shake'
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Up to 4, 000 people a day have uploaded their own 30-second video variations to the Harlem Shake dance track by US DJ Baauer.
BBC: Harlem Shake in Berlin
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Baauer, whose real name is Harry Rodrigues, is a Brooklyn-based producer known for "trap" music, an electronic style that draws on hip-hop beats.
WSJ: Why the Harlem Shake Matters
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Instead of leaping into the media spotlight, Baauer aligned himself with Web culture by answering written questions from members of the social network Reddit.
WSJ: Why the Harlem Shake Matters
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That's one reason why the indie record label that released Baauer's song, Mad Decent, gives fans free rein to use its releases in their YouTube videos.
WSJ: Why the Harlem Shake Matters
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The new methodology catapulted Baauer's "Harlem Shake" song to No. 1 on the Hot 100, a chart that premiered in 1958 with Ricky Nelson on top.
WSJ: Why the Harlem Shake Matters
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Baauer himself has refused to be a poster boy.
WSJ: Why the Harlem Shake Matters
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Baauer's Harlem Shake - the song behind the latest internet dance craze - fell from three to eight in the singles chart, while Macklemore and Ryan Lewis's Thrift Shop dropped from two to four.
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