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"Nobody Gets Me" is a song by American singer-songwriter SZA and the fourth single from her second studio album, SOS (2022). It was sent to Italian radio on January 6, 2023, and US contemporary hit radio four days later. The song peaked at number 10 on the US Billboard Hot 100, the Canadian Hot 100, and the Official New Zealand Music Chart.
The music video for "Broken Clocks" was co-directed by SZA and Dave Free, and was released on March 30, 2018. [4] The video features SZA at a summer camp in the wilderness. As the song comes to a close, the camera cuts to SZA as a stripper, lying unconscious on the bathroom floor of a strip club, following an altercation with another woman. [5]
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"Nobody" is a song by American rapper Nas from his thirteenth studio album, King's Disease II (2021). The song was produced by Hit-Boy, and features additional verses from fellow American rapper Lauryn Hill. The song was written by the three aforementioned artists, along with songwriters Dustin James Corbett and Joshua Strange.
Pitchfork wrote, "despite the melancholy piano chords and simmering four-on-the-floor beat, Mitski embodies her album title: She sounds like a wallflower joining the aching, lonesome tradition of sad cowboys like Hank Williams. Her lyrics are raw and essential, the same mix of vulnerability and strength that made songs like 2014's 'I Don't ...
"Nobody but Me" is a song written by O'Kelly, Rudolph, and Ronald Isley of The Isley Brothers and first recorded by The Isley Brothers in 1962. The most commercially successful and widely known version to date is the 1968 US Top 10 hit by The Human Beinz , which was their only major chart success.
"Nobody" is a song written by Kye Fleming and Dennis Morgan, and recorded by American country music artist Sylvia. It was released in June 1982 as the second single from the album Just Sylvia . The song was first recorded in 1982 by Sylvia, who was already a country music star, achieving a #1 hit and 2 other top tens in 1981.
It was first recorded by Hank Snow in 1949 and it became one of his standards, although it did not chart for him. The song has been covered several times in the UK.It was on Lonnie Donegan's first album in 1956 (which went to No. 2 on the UK Albums Chart), [1] and in 1969 Karen Young took the song to No. 6 on the UK Singles Chart [2] and used it as the title track on her album.