Rock That Body — The Black Eyed Peas (2010)

Rock That Body — The Black Eyed Peas (2010)

By 2010, The Black Eyed Peas were at the peak of their global popularity. Following the massive success of The E.N.D., the group had fully embraced dance music, electronic production, and futuristic pop, helping define the sound of mainstream radio at the turn of the decade.
Rock That Body was released on January 29, 2010, as the fifth single from The E.N.D. (short for The Energy Never Dies). Produced by will.i.am, David Guetta, Mark Knight and Funkagenda, the song samples elements from It Takes Two by Rob Base and DJ E‑Z Rock, itself built upon the iconic Think (About It) by Lyn Collins.

The track is essentially a celebration of the dance floor. Rather than telling a complex story, it invites listeners to disconnect from everyday life and surrender to rhythm, energy, and collective celebration. Its repetitive hooks and electronic beats were designed for clubs, festivals, and large crowds.

Musically, Rock That Body embodies the EDM-pop explosion that dominated the early 2010s. Heavy synthesizers, layered vocals, and digital effects create a futuristic atmosphere that became a signature of the group's sound during this era.

Commercially, the song extended an extraordinary run of hits for the band. It reached No. 9 on the Billboard Hot 100 on June 19, 2010, becoming the seventh Top 10 single from The E.N.D., an impressive achievement that cemented the album's place as one of the defining pop records of its time. In the UK it peaked at number 11 on the Official Chart on March 27, 2010.

The music video embraced an equally futuristic aesthetic, imagining the members in a science-fiction-inspired world filled with advanced technology, dance battles, and cybernetic imagery—perfectly aligned with the group's creative vision at the time. 



Rock That Body captures a specific moment in pop history when electronic dance music was moving from clubs into the center of mainstream culture.

The Black Eyed Peas were among the artists who helped accelerate that transition, blending hip hop, pop, and EDM into a formula that dominated charts around the world.

Today, the song remains a snapshot of the optimism and energy that defined early-2010s pop music.

Some songs are built to be timeless. Others are built to capture a moment. Rock That Body does both: it instantly transports listeners back to an era when dance music took over the world and every night felt like a celebration.

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