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His stage name is based on of a trend wherein an artist would shorten their first name to a single letter with the suffix "-Dot", along with his initials of "MR". [10] His first viral song was a freestyle called "100 Gyal" in 2017, and he was featured on a segment of Smile Jamaica where he won against two other artists by a public vote.
Yvonne Elliman, 1975. The song was recorded by American singer, songwriter, and actress Yvonne Elliman for the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack.. Although Yvonne Elliman had cut her 1976 album, Love Me, with producer Freddie Perren, who was a major force in the disco movement (Perren had produced the Sylvers' 1976 number 1 "Boogie Fever" and would soon collaborate with Gloria Gaynor on the ...
"Before my album Get Rich or Die Tryin' came out, there was a big debate about what the first single should be. Jimmy Iovine thought it should be the one that Dr. Dre produced, 'If I Can't'. But Em wanted 'In da Club'. In the end they were deadlocked, so they asked me and I told them, real quiet, 'In da Club'." – 50 Cent [1]
I Can't may refer to: "I Can't" (Foxy Brown song), 1999 "I Can't" (Lisa Brokop song), 2008, covered by Reba McEntire "I Can't", a song by Radiohead from the 1993 album Pablo Honey "I Can't", a song by Gucci Mane from the 2016 album The Return of East Atlanta Santa; I Can't (Friday Night Lights), an episode of the TV series Friday Night Lights
"If I Can't Have You" is an electro song with a length of 3:20 (3 minutes and 20 seconds). [2] [3] The song, according to Blake Solomon of AbsolutePunk, bears beats reminiscent of musical compositions by American singer Britney Spears while its composition is reminiscent of 1980s dance music.
I Can't Get Over You may refer to: "I Can't Get Over You" (Brooks & Dunn song) , 1998 "I Can't Get Over You", a bonus track from the 1966 album Black Monk Time by The Monks, B-side of single "Cuckoo"
Mendes told Zane Lowe on the Beats 1 radio show that out of the 45 songs he has written in the last six months, which are stylistically "all over the place" and have "different vibes", "If I Can't Have You" was "the one consistently every time I played for myself and for friends and family was giving people that smile". [4]
"I Can't Get Next to You" is a 1969 single recorded by the Temptations and written by Norman Whitfield and Barrett Strong for the Gordy label. The song was a No. 1 single on the Billboard Top Pop Singles chart for two weeks in 1969, from October 18 to October 25, replacing " Sugar, Sugar " by the Archies and replaced by " Suspicious Minds " by ...