Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In an interview with Billboard, Isley revealed that he “met and talked to Beyoncé when she was just getting started with Destiny’s Child,” and that “working with Beyoncé was one of the first things [he] thought about” when he began crafting his new album. Isley's wife, Kandy, added, “Tina Knowles-Lawson [Beyoncé’s mother] was ...
Album US [6] US R&B [7] "Down Low (Nobody Has to Know)" (R. Kelly featuring Ronald Isley) 1995 4: 1 R. Kelly "Come with Me" (Keith Sweat featuring Ronald Isley) 1996 68: 27 Keith Sweat "Smokin' Me Out" (Warren G featuring Ronald Isley) 1997 35: 20 Take a Look Over Your Shoulder "Friend of Mine" (Kelly Price featuring Ronald Isley and R. Kelly ...
"Working with Beyoncé was one of the first things I thought about," Ronald Isley told Billboard of starting work on his new album.
In 1991, Ron revived the group; Ernie Isley and brother Marvin returned to the fold. that year they released the album, Tracks of Life. Five years later, Ron Isley gained popularity as video villain Frank Biggs (or Mr. Biggs) in the music video for R. Kelly's hit "Down Low (Nobody Has to Know)", which included the Isley Brothers as featured ...
The song marks the first collaboration between Beyoncé and The Isley Brothers. Beyoncé & Ronald Isley Have a New Collaboration: Listen to a Snippet of ‘Make Me Say It Again, Girl’ Skip to ...
Everybody knows the Isley Brothers, a family band with era-defining hits in every decade since its start in the 1950s with “Twist and Shout,” “This Old Heart Of Mine (Is Weak For You ...
In addition, Ron Isley became a sought-after hook singer for R. Kelly, Warren G, 2Pac and UGK. [citation needed] Isley released his first solo album Mr. I on November 30, 2010. The album includes the first single "No More". It debuted at number 50 on the Billboard 200, selling 22,243 copies. It was his first solo album to crack that chart. [8]
In October 2003, five months following the release of their predecessor, Body Kiss, which achieved commercial success, [3] and almost a month ahead of the release of Ronald Isley and Burt Bacharach's collaborative album, Here I Am, the group's label, DreamWorks Records, previously a music label subsidiary of DreamWorks Pictures, was acquired by Universal Music Group and then folded into ...