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"Relax" is the debut single by English new wave band Frankie Goes to Hollywood, released in the United Kingdom by ZTT Records in 1983. The hit version, produced by Trevor Horn and featuring the band along with other musicians, entered the UK Top 75 singles chart in November 1983 but did not crack the Top 40 until early January 1984.
"My Neck, My Back (Lick It)" is a song by American rapper Khia, released in April 2002 as the lead single from her debut studio album, Thug Misses. Owing to its sexually explicit lyrics, an edited version of the song was released to mainstream radio.
Khia released her debut album, Thug Misses, in 2002 on Dirty Down/Artemis Records as a re-release from the original version by Divine Records. [7] The lead single "My Neck, My Back (Lick It)" became a breakthrough single, charting at #42 on the Hot 100 chart and #12 on the Hot Rap Tracks chart. [8]
The song was described as being: "an expression of Jamaican rude boy culture". [ 8 ] [ 9 ] The song has been covered a number of times over the years, including Zebda in 2003, Asian Dub Foundation , [ 9 ] Lethal Bizzle in 2007, [ 9 ] and more recently, Culture Abuse in 2018.
"Free" is a song by British drum and bass band Rudimental. It features the vocals from English-born Scottish singer and songwriter Emeli Sandé . The song was released in the United Kingdom on 18 November 2013 as the sixth single from their debut studio album, Home (2013).
"Free" is an urgent pop song that lyrically discusses the singer's problems with anxiety and traumas. She has said it was the last song she wrote before the first lockdown of the COVID-19 pandemic. A music video for the song directed by American director Autumn de Wilde was filmed in Kyiv, Ukraine in
"Can't Get It Back" was released as the first single on October 16, 2001 in the United States where it peaked at 91 on Billboard ' s Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart. [2] With Blaque Out eventually being shelved, "Can't Get It Back" was later re-recorded, remixed, and released by British girl group Mis-Teeq in 2003.
The song's accompanying music video, co-directed by Bada$$ and Nathan Smith, was released on March 6, 2017 on Pro Era's YouTube account. [8]In the video, Bada$$, in a windy meadow at a desert, alternates between speaking to a group of children and standing in solidarity with a group of adults with their chained hands, following with a firing squad consisting of police officers and businessmen ...