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"Undying Love" was used in: a promotional trailer for Halo Fest and in the History Channel documentary, The Universe Season 6, in episode "Crash Landing on Mars". "After the Fall" was used in: the "Take Earth Back" trailer for the video game Mass Effect 3; a commercial for the television series Pretty Little Liars
Production on the song was also overseen by Polow. [1] Her first collaboration with the producer, Tamia consulted Polow to have him contribute a more "progressive" sound. [2] In a promotional interview for parent album Love Life (2015), she stated: "Polow Da Don is heavy hitting Hip hop/R&B and my voice is soft and sweet. On a song like ...
Pandemonium! is the third and final studio album from the boy band B2K.The album was released through Epic on December 10, 2002. It reached number one on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart and number 10 on the Billboard 200 chart, and spawned their number one single "Bump, Bump, Bump".
On the track “The Grudge” in particular, she sings about someone she had an “undying love” for who broke her trust and left her deeply hurt. In the first verse, she sings: Trust that you ...
Let’s be honest: Love songs always hit right in the feels. A ballad can transform from a regular song into the soundtrack of your relationship—whether you’re celebrating your 25th ...
Find the best love songs of all time, including rap, country and R&B songs from the 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s, and 2000s, describing every stage of the relationship.
Taste of Country writer Billy Dukes said "Repeated choruses aside, this 125-word jam finds Combs listing things he enjoys a fair bit before stating his undying love for being in love with his woman...the list is filled with specific, colorful detail that paints the song and adds strokes to a broader portrait of Combs as an artist." [2]
Further singles followed, with "Undying Love", "Storybook Children" and "If I Were a Carpenter" in 1968 (all produced by Coxsone Dodd), "Private Number" (for Joe Gibbs) and "Freedom Train" (for Lee "Scratch" Perry - one of the first Jamaican singles ever to be released in stereo) in 1969. [2]