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Let Me Be Your Angel is the second studio album by American singer Stacy Lattisaw. Released on May 21, 1980, by Cotillion Records , Lattisaw was 13 years old when this album was released. The album's first two singles, " Dynamite! " and " Jump to the Beat ", both peaked at number one on the U.S. disco charts in 1980.
Let Me Be Your Angel: 44 9 1981 With You: 46 8 1982 Sneakin' Out: 55 11 1983 Sixteen: 160 26 1984 Perfect Combination (with Johnny Gill) 139 27 1985 I'm Not the Same Girl — — 1986 Take Me All the Way: 131 36 Motown: 1988 Personal Attention: 153 24 1989 What You Need — 16 "—" denotes the album failed to chart
"Dynamite!" is a song produced by Narada Michael Walden, co-written by Walden and Bunny Hull, and recorded by Stacy Lattisaw for her second studio album Let Me Be Your Angel (1980). The song was released as the lead single from Let Me Be Your Angel in 1980.
Stacy Lattisaw was only 13 years old when "Jump to the Beat" was released in May 1980. Although it was not released as a North American single, and therefore did not chart on the Billboard Hot 100, it reached No. 1 (along with another song "Dynamite!") on the Billboard dance charts. [1]
Perfect Combination is a collaboration album by American contemporary R&B singers Stacy Lattisaw and Johnny Gill, released on February 13, 1984, via Cotillion Records. [1] The album peaked at number 139 on the Billboard 200. [2]
Written by Costello on a train ride to Liverpool in 1976, the song features lyrics, according to Costello, about "romantic disappointment". The song features Byrds-inspired music with an intro contributed by John McFee of Costello's then-backing band Clover. "(The Angels Wanna Wear My) Red Shoes" was released as the third single from My Aim Is ...
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Jay-Z had previously dissed Nas in his song "Takeover", taken from his September 2001 release, The Blueprint. [5]On Stillmatic, Nas retaliated with the anticipated song, "Ether," a response to "Takeover" which insinuated that Jay-Z had stolen lyrics from The Notorious B.I.G. several times, that he had sold out, and that he was a misogynist, among other things.