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"No More Parties in LA" (often stylized as "No More Parties in L.A.") is a song by American rapper Kanye West from his seventh studio album, The Life of Pablo (2016), featuring vocals from fellow rapper Kendrick Lamar. It was produced by West and Madlib, who began the recording in 2010.
A lyric video was filmed in Los Angeles and was uploaded to YouTube on 19 June 2014. [8] It consists entirely of numerous Snapchat clips that last no more than five seconds each. [9] The official music video was directed by Director X. It was uploaded on 23 July 2014. The video features Union J hosting a party in a flat. [10]
A snippet of the song went viral on the video-sharing platform TikTok, and became her first charting song on any chart after peaking on the Billboard Hot 100 at number 26. A remix of the song, featuring fellow American rapper Lil Durk, was released on February 19, 2021, with the remix being included on Leray's debut studio album Trendsetter (2022).
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
Justin Bieber missed hearing Rihanna's voice.. After the Fenty founder, 36, closed out 2024 at a New York City Girls Love Karaoke event on Saturday, Dec. 28, the "Baby" hitmaker, 30, reacted to ...
With a few hours left in 2024, the Unstoppable actor took to Instagram to reminisce on her 1998 song “Waiting for Tonight,” even recreating scenes from the music video.
Carpool Karaoke was a recurring segment on The Late Late Show with James Corden, in which host James Corden invites famous musical guests to sing along to their songs with him whilst traveling in a car driven by Corden [1] on a planned route usually in Los Angeles, usually under the pretense of needing to get to work and preferring to use the high-occupancy carpool vehicle lane, [2] or the ...
The Brass Monkey has featured on several lists from publications like Los Angeles Magazine's "The 5 Coolest Karaoke Bars in L.A." (2022), [7] LA Weekly's "The 10 Best Bars in Los Angeles" (2017), [8] and Thrillist's "10 best karaoke bars in LA" (2014), [9] including being described by the LA Times as a "Feel-Good-Favorite."