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Jvke, to his credit, nails the push-pull at the heart of the song—nimble enough to sound nonchalant during the lead-up, then giving his absolute all on the hook — while the racing piano line beneath him is a memorable piece of production that simultaneously doesn't distract from the vocal take."
"Angel Pt. 1" is a song by American rappers Kodak Black and NLE Choppa featuring South Korean singer Jimin and American singers Jvke and Muni Long. It was released on May 18, 2023, as the fourth single from the soundtrack to the American action film Fast X (2023).
Jacob Dodge Lawson, [1] (born 3 March 2001), known professionally as Jvke (stylized in all caps and pronounced "Jake" [2]), is an American singer-songwriter, internet personality and record producer. During the COVID-19 lockdowns , he started creating TikTok videos for his songs, one of which, "Upside Down", went viral in 2021.
"God Is Really Real" is a song by American pop band AJR. It was released by Mercury Records and serves as the eleventh track on the band's fifth studio album The Maybe Man. Despite not being planned as a single, the song, which is dedicated to the brothers' terminally ill father, [1] was surprise-released to YouTube on July 3, 2023. The single ...
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"Sunroof" is a song by American singer Nicky Youre and Los Angeles-based musician and producer Dazy (Nick Minutaglio, who has also recorded as Snocker). [4] [5] It was released on December 3, 2021, through Thirty Knots and Columbia Records. By November 2022, the song had reached the Billboard Hot 100 top 10, and been streamed 397 million times ...
Anyone But You is based on the play Much Ado About Nothing by William Shakespeare, arguably the first incarnation of the enemies-to-lovers trope and a blueprint for the sparky banter on which ...
Published in 1926, the song was first recorded by Clarence Williams' Blue Five with vocalist Eva Taylor in 1927. [1] It was popularized by the 1930 recording by McKinney's Cotton Pickers , who used it as their theme song [ 2 ] and by Louis Armstrong's record for Okeh Records (catalogue No.41448), both of which featured in the charts of 1930. [ 3 ]