Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"All Me" is a song by Canadian rapper Drake featuring American rappers 2 Chainz and Big Sean from the former's third studio album Nothing Was the Same (2013). The song was serviced to urban contemporary radio as the album's third official single on September 24, 2013.
The song is referred to in Drake's ITV sitcom The Worker. In the 1969 episode "Hello, Cobbler" (coincidentally, the only one to survive in a colour version), Charlie's eponymous character is hit on the head by a boomerang and hallucinates a bizarre Australian adventure (which sees the actors, including Drake himself, playing Aboriginal ...
"Race My Mind" contains samples of "Dead Wrong", written by Christopher Wallace and Osten Harvey, as performed by The Notorious B.I.G., as well as samples of Sun Ra's recording and composition "Rumpelstiltskin" and "The Signs Part IV" by David Axelrod.
Drake Releases Three New Songs Including ‘SOD,’ ‘Circadian Rhythm’ and ‘No Face’ Featuring Playboi Carti. Steven J. Horowitz. August 23, 2024 at 4:05 PM.
The song was originally by rapper Bun B featuring Drake for his 3rd album, Trill OG, with a different chorus, entitled "All Night Long." [3] This version was never released, but a version with Drake's and Bun B's verses and the final chorus was released as the "OG Mix", which is the official remix of the song, on September 13, 2010, on Bun B's Twitter page.
"Circo Loco" features "progressing" chords and "booming" bass in production, [2] backed by the slowed-and-chopped sample. [3] In his verse, Drake first raps about his sex life, [4] and then addresses the shooting of Megan Thee Stallion by Canadian rapper Tory Lanez in 2020, suggesting in his lyrics that she was lying about the incident: "This bitch lie 'bout getting shots, but she still a ...
“Red Button,” which released on Thursday night along with Drake’s new project “Scary Hours 3,” features the lyrics: “Taylor Swift the only n—- that I ever rated/ Only one could make ...
"Talk to Me" is a hip hop song with an R&B-style chorus and "smoothed-out" production. [3] [4] Chris DeVille of Stereogum wrote about the song, "Drake is in swaggering pop mode, while Drakeo stays in the cut muttering hard street talk as usual."