Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Meet the Grahams" is a diss track by American rapper Kendrick Lamar. It was released on May 3, 2024, through Interscope Records , during his ongoing feud with Canadian rapper Drake . [ 1 ] It is Lamar's response to the release of Drake's " Family Matters ," a diss track mainly aimed at Lamar. [ 2 ] "
Live Aid was a two-venue benefit concert and music-based fundraising initiative held on Saturday, 13 July 1985. The event was organised by Bob Geldof and Midge Ure to raise further funds for relief of the 1983–1985 famine in Ethiopia, a movement that started with the release of the successful charity single "Do They Know It's Christmas?" in December 1984.
A Maybach driving glove is used as the cover art of this song, a cropped portion of the image used for the cover of Lamar's next single and diss track, "Meet the Grahams". [5] Many publications noted producer Jack Antonoff's involvement, believing it to be in retaliation to Drake's " Taylor Made Freestyle " as Antonoff has been a consistent ...
The war of words wages on between Drake and Kendrick Lamar, and this time it’s personal. After the latter released his new diss track entitled “6:16 in LA” earlier this morning, both rappers ...
The Grahams returned with their self-titled album 'The Grahams' in September 2023, featuring 10 of their favorite songs from their first 3 studio albums, reimagined to reflect their latest sound. [33] Recorded at their 3Sirens studio in East nashville and reuniting again with producer and friend Dan Molad (Lucius, Coco). [34]
Following a slew of Live Aid-style promotions, sequels and events and the death of Mercury, it was re-written in the 1990s as "Slag Aid", retaining most of the original lyrics. The version released on the live album Showbusiness! also references McCartney, but adds Axl Rose, Michael Jackson and John Lydon as more modern examples. [1]
"Not Like Us" is a "club-friendly" West Coast hip-hop track with strong hyphy stylings. [10]Several elements of its production, including the "stirring" violins, piano and brass instruments, were taken from samples of Monk Higgins's 1968 rendition of "I Believe to My Soul", a cover of Ray Charles's 1961 composition. [11]
Bernard Watson (born David Weinstein, 1967) [1] is an American singer and guitarist, who was the opening act at the American leg of the Live Aid concert in JFK Stadium, Philadelphia on July 13, 1985. An 18-year-old from Miami Beach , he had just graduated from high school and had no professional musical experience.