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On October 10, 2023, Mya released a dance version music video of "Whine." Directed solely by back up dancer Derek Brown, the singer is joined by Dance Jamaica dancehall queens Latonya Style, Sara Bendii, Kissy McKoy and Shanice Caterpillar to give viewers some lessons and eye candy.
Issue date Song Artist(s) Remixer(s) Ref(s) January 7 "I'm Good (Blue)" David Guetta and Bebe Rexha: Oliver Heldens, Tiësto, R3hab [5]January 14 [6]January 21 [7]January 28
On 25 May 2023, Messia signed a recording contract with Interscope Records. [17] On 20 July 2023, Messia released a remix of "Talibans", renamed as "Talibans II", featuring Burna Boy. It served as the second single from Burna Boy's seventh studio album I Told Them... (2023). [18] [19] The remix peaked at number 39 on the New Zealand Hot Singles ...
In late 2023, Shenseea had made a work on her song " Waistline" and on 26 January 2024 released "Hit and Run" featuring Masicka and Di Genius. [24] "Hit and Run" emerged as one of Shenseea's biggest hits in her native country Jamaica as well as multiple other countries in the Caribbean with the music video garnering over 60 million views on ...
"Talibans" is a song by Jamaican-born Kittitian recording artist Byron Messia, released on January 20, 2023, from his debut studio album No Love. Considered his breakout song, it went viral in early 2023. An official remix of the song titled "Talibans II" with Nigerian singer Burna Boy was released on July 20, 2023.
At the end of a year, Billboard will publish an annual list of the 100 most successful songs throughout that year on the Hot 100 chart based on the information. For 2023, the list was published on November 21, calculated with data from November 19, 2022, to October 21, 2023. [2]
The accompanying lyric video was shared on YouTube the same day. [8] Although "Truth or Dare" and "Art" were being promoted as singles from Tyla at the time, "Jump" became popular on streaming platforms, increasing its stream tally by nearly 10% for four consecutive weeks. It was boosted by two viral dance trends on the video sharing service ...
The use of video light specifically was a way to express oneself and seek visibility in the social sphere in order to be recognized as citizens in a postcolonial Jamaican society. [22] At the onset of the dancehall scene, sound systems were the only way that some Jamaican audiences might hear the latest songs from a popular artist.