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"All Girls Are the Same" (alternatively stylized in all caps) [1] is the debut single by American rapper Juice Wrld. It was released as the lead single from his debut studio album, Goodbye & Good Riddance on April 13, 2018, after its music video premiered in February.
AJR at "We the People" in 2021American indie pop band AJR has written or co-written every song in their discography, except various covers and two featured songs.The trio was formed by the brothers—Ryan Met (keyboard, ukulele, vocals), Jack Met (guitar, sampler, lead vocals), and Adam Met (bass guitar, backing vocals)—in Chelsea, Manhattan. [1]
The video contains a black cut at 1:12. Ariana Grande – "One Last Time", 2015; The video contains multiple cuts, while the screen fades to black. Maroon 5 – "This Summer's Gonna Hurt like a Motherfucker", 2015; Co-director Travis Schneider stated in an interview that although the video was planned to be one shot, there is one cut in the video.
Metro named AJR their artist of the day on March 13, 2017. [24] After performing the song on Today in April, [25] the song was released to the radio for airplay and charted further. [26] "Weak" accumulated more than 250 million streams after a year of its release, [27] with Apple Music including "Weak" on its "Best Alt Songs of the 2010s ...
The discography of American indie pop trio AJR consists of five studio albums, forty-three music videos, eight extended plays, twenty-seven singles, [needs update] and eight promotional singles. The band is also featured on seven songs and have three independent releases.
While AJR wrote their second studio album The Click, they wrote five additional songs that weren't released on the standard edition. After the album's release on June 9, 2017, Steve Aoki reached out to the band asking if they had any unfinished material, to which AJR sent "Pretender". [ 1 ]
The band claimed they spent three weeks attempting to produce a high-budget video that they found unsatisfactory, so they quickly filmed a low-budget video that they liked more. The video features Jack in Times Square dressed up as Elmo; later in the video, he ends up being chased by the NYPD due to a lack of permit. [8]
AJR additionally hired Bruce Healey, a previous arranger for the Mellomen's music, to arrange the choir on "Next Up Forever". [4] Healey used recording equipment such as a Pacific Bell telephone from the 1940s to create an authentic close harmony choir sound rather than using plug-ins to emulate the sound.