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The song was available as a digital download on Amazon in the U.S. on September 16, 2008. The song was then later released as a promo CD on November 15, 2008, [1] after it was sent to radio stations for airplay around the U.S.. "Bust Your Windows" was nominated in the Best R&B Song category for 2009's Grammy Awards.
The song reached number thirty-seven on the Billboard Hot 100 and number one on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart. [ 10 ] [ 11 ] She later performed the song at the 2008 BET Awards . [ 12 ] " Bust Your Windows " was released as the second single from the album on September 16, 2008, [ 13 ] and its music video premiered in October 2008.
Jazmine Sullivan's parents are Don and Pam Sullivan. [3] Her mother was a former backup singer for Philadelphia International Records. [4] When she was five years old, her father landed a position as a curator for the city's Historic Strawberry Mansion in the Strawberry Mansion section of Philadelphia, and her family moved into the historical landmark.
In the mid-1980s, with free agency barely a decade old, the perennial All-Star deftfully weaponized his status as one of baseball’s best. As money gushed into the sport, Rickey used arbitration ...
Alphabet's Google is facing a second complaint from a U.S. labor board claiming that it is the employer of contract workers and must bargain with their union, the agency said on Monday. The ...
It is rare for school shooters to be female, according to the data and experts who study such events.. In fact, the percentage of people who have perpetrated mass shootings who are female is in ...
Salaam Remi Gibbs (born May 14, 1972) [1] [2] is an American record producer. He is most known for producing material for close associates Nas, Amy Winehouse, and Jazmine Sullivan, but has also produced for other mainstream acts including Alicia Keys, Fugees, Doja Cat, Miguel, Fergie, Alessia Cara, Nelly Furtado, and Estelle, among others. [3]
Lyrically, "Thru Your Phone" is about the protagonist finding explicit conversations on her partner's mobile phone and contemplates revenge on him. [2] A Billboard article deemed the song "the rap equivalent of Jazmine Sullivan's "Bust Your Windows", [3] while a Rolling Stone article noted it as one of the two "most emotionally hardcore" songs in the parent album—the other being "I Do ...