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"BBL Drizzy" samples an artificial intelligence-generated track, released on April 14, of the same name by comedian King Willonius. [1] It is the first notable example of AI sampling in mainstream hip-hop music, according to Billboard .
King Willonius, a little-known New York-based comedian, used AI tools to create “BBL Drizzy,” a pristine soul song that seemed to be unearthed from the 1970s and whose lyrics lightly mocked Drake.
Then, contemporary hip hop producer Metro Boomin’, eager to dunk on Drake, remixed the song and created the “BBL Drizzy” challenge, offering $10,000 and a free beat to the best lyricist.
The song samples an AI generated R&B parody song evocative of 1970s music created by comedic performer King Willonius. [166] The instrumental received more than 3.3 million streams on SoundCloud within a week and managed to maintain the number one spot on the platform's "New and Hot" chart. [167]
King's version is a slow (65 beats per minute) [5] twelve-bar blues notated in 12/8 time in the key of C. [10] Blues historian Robert Palmer sees King's guitar work on the song as showing his T-Bone Walker influences, "though his tone was bigger and rounder and his phrasing somewhat heavier". [11]
It was composed in 1860 by then 25-year-old Prince William Charles Lunalilo, who later became King Lunalilo. Prior to 1860, Hawai‘i lacked its own national anthem and had used the British royal anthem "God Save the King". A contest was sponsored in 1860 by Kamehameha IV, who wanted a song with Hawaiian lyrics set to the tune of the British ...
English lyrics (translation) The Ravens had regional success with a 1955 revival. The Shadows performed an instrumental version of this song on their 1967 album Jigsaw. Spanish lyrics (original) Gloria Jean sang "Aquellos Ojos Verdes" in the 1943 film When Johnny Comes Marching Home.
Other notable non-Mexican interpreters of this song were Nat King Cole [8] on his album More Cole Español (1962), [9] Percy Faith on Viva the Music of Mexico (1958), [10] and Desi Arnaz on The Best of Desi Arnaz Mambo King. [10] Among other notable Mexican interpreters are Rafael Jorge Negrete, [11] Esquivel and His Orchestra and Vicente ...