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Playlist: The Very Best of R. Kelly is a compilation album by American R&B singer R. Kelly. [1] [2] The album features some of Kelly's released and unreleased songs (as singles) over the course of his career. It peaked at #60 on the Billboard's R&B/Hip Hop Album chart.
The videography of American singer R. Kelly, consists of 90 music videos (60 as a lead artist and 30 as a featured artist), 7 cameo appearances, 1 commercial. Music videos [ edit ]
"Freak Dat Body" R. Kelly Robert Kelly‡ Robert Kelly± 1993 12 Play [1] "Freak Tonight" R. Kelly Robert Kelly‡ Robert Kelly± 1996 A Thin Line Between Love and Hate [Original Soundtrack] "Freaky In The Club" R. Kelly Robert Kelly‡ Robert Kelly± 2007 Double Up "Friend of Mine (Remix)" (feat. R. Kelly & Ronald Isley) Kelly Price Robert Kelly
American R&B singer-songwriter R. Kelly has released 18 studio albums, five compilation albums, one soundtrack album, six video albums, one mixtape, two extended play, and 133 singles (including 49 as a featured artist and 12 promotional singles).
Robert Kelly Tone and Poke (co.) 1998 R. "Music Must Be a Lady" Robert Kelly‡ Robert Kelly± 2010 Love Letter "My Story" (feat. 2 Chainz)† Robert Kelly Paul Jefferies Tauheed Epps Nineteen85 Robert Kelly 2013 Black Panties "Naked" Robert Kelly‡ Robert Kelly± 2002 The Best of Both Worlds "Not Feelin' The Love" Robert Kelly‡ Robert Kelly ...
"Bad Man" is a single by musician R. Kelly, [1] included on the soundtrack for the 2000 film Shaft. It was the first and only single from the Shaft soundtrack and charted at number 30 on the R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks chart. A video for the song was directed by Hype Williams. [2]
"Fiesta (Remix)" follows the previous single and music video, "The Storm Is Over Now". In 2001, the song spent five weeks at #1 on the US R&B chart and also reached #6 on the US Pop chart. The original "Fiesta" featured rapper Jadakiss. However, his verse was replaced by Boo & Gotti before the track was added as one of the 19 tracks on TP-2.com.
R. Kelly received mostly positive reviews from music critics. Callum Jones of Rolling Stone wrote, Kelly "has grown out of his unthinking misogyny to the point where he makes a plea in 'As I Look Into My Life' to 'brothers in the ghetto' to 'love and respect that woman and bring her happiness.' Make love not war is an old message, but Kelly ...