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"Kiss Me More" is a song by American rapper and singer Doja Cat featuring American singer SZA from the former's third studio album Planet Her (2021). It was released on April 9, 2021, as the album's lead single through Kemosabe and RCA Records .
The two appeared on versions of Summer Walker's "No Love" and Flo Milli's "Never Lose Me". Doja Cat and SZA duetted on "Kiss Me More" and the "Kill Bill" remix. SZA co-wrote one SOS track with Lizzo and featured on the latter's "Special" remix. Brandun DeShay, one of SZA's earliest collaborators, co-wrote three songs from See.SZA.Run.
Three collaborations were international top-10 songs: her feature on "What Lovers Do" by Maroon 5 in 2017, "All the Stars" with Kendrick Lamar from the Black Panther soundtrack in 2018, and her feature on "Kiss Me More" by Doja Cat in 2021. The deluxe edition of Ctrl was released on the album's five-year anniversary in 2022. [4]
SZA arrived in downtown Phoenix on a tour in continued support of last year's "SOS," a deeply soulful second album that made the rounds of year-end critics' lists, from BPM to Consequence and ...
SZA drops 'Lana' after 'SOS,' ahead of tour with Kendrick Lamar The R&B star, who has reached a level of success rarely crested by artists with only two studio albums, is capping off a busy few years.
In April 2021, SZA was featured on Doja Cat's single "Kiss Me More", the lead single from her album Planet Her. [114] [115] The track became a global success, reaching number one in New Zealand [116] and landing in the top ten on the charts in the United States, [117] Canada, [118] the United Kingdom, [119] Australia, [120] Ireland, [121] and ...
07 Love Me 4 Me. 08 Chill Baby. 09 My Turn. 10 Crybaby. 11 Kitchen. 12 Get Behind Me (Interlude) 13 Drive. 14 Another Life. 15 Saturn. 16 Joni feat. Don Toliver* 17 Take You Down* 18 Open Arms ...
Kiss Me More" with SZA, was released as the lead single off the album on April 9, 2021. [76] [77] The song was serviced to contemporary hit radio, rhythmic contemporary radio and adult contemporary radio formats in the United States, [78] [79] [80] as well as on contemporary hit radio formats in Russia and Italy.