D4L were an American hip-hop group from Atlanta who landed at the leading edge of two trends at once: the bouncy, minimalist snap sound and the ringtone-driven download era. "Laffy Taffy", released in 2005, was a featherlight, hook-heavy snap track, and it became a number-one hit on the US Billboard Hot 100, propelled by record-breaking ringtone and digital sales.
The group did not last long as a unit, and no follow-up came close, leaving them defined entirely by that one airy, candy-named anthem.
On streaming, "Laffy Taffy" sits near 196 million plays, while their next most-streamed track trails at around nine million. That sends the ratio above 21, far past our 5.0 line.
By our measure D4L are a certified one-hit wonder. Theirs is a classic mid-2000s story: a group who caught a very specific moment, when a catchy snap track and a new way of buying music collided, scored one chart-topping novelty, then watched the scene move on, leaving that single lightweight hit standing far ahead of everything else they put out. For better or worse, "Laffy Taffy" marked the instant the music industry realised a ringtone could make a number one, and on streams it remains the only D4L song most listeners know.