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"Marijuana" is a single by American hip hop recording artist Kid Cudi, as a promotional single taken from his second studio album Man on the Moon II: The Legend of Mr. Rager (2010). The song was produced by Cudi, alongside American record producer Dot da Genius, who provided the song's guitar solo. [1]
High Times magazine ranked Viper number 14 among the 25 Pot Songs of All Time in 2002. [14] The writer Maya Angelou recalled her mother, who did not smoke the stuff herself, often singing Viper as a way of pointing out the prevalence and acceptance of marijuana smoking in the "black ghetto" in the 1930s and 1940s. [15]
"Feel Good Hit of the Summer" is a song by American rock band Queens of the Stone Age and written by band members Josh Homme and Nick Oliveri. It is the opening track of their second album, Rated R, and the second single to be released from it. [1] The song also accompanied the UK release of the album on a separate CD entitled Rated U. [2]
The lyrics relate the narrator's experience of planning to do several things, but failing to do so after having smoked marijuana. [3] The song was written in a few minutes, and was reportedly motivated by the singer's realization that "everyone talks about smoking weed, but no one ever really talks about the effects of marijuana".
Jelly Roll is crediting marijuana with helping him to steer clear of hard drugs and alcohol. In a new interview with Taste of Country, the 39-year-old singer, who also goes by Jason Bradley DeFord ...
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"Mary Jane" is a song by American musician Rick James. It was released on September 9, 1978 as the second single from his debut album Come Get It!.The song peaked in the top five on the R&B charts in the United States in 1978, [1] and crossed over to the US Hot 100.
The song's arrangement provides a sharp contrast to its lyrics. For ironic effect Ochs wanted an upbeat arrangement. [4] Producer Larry Marks and pianist Lincoln Mayorga produced an arrangement that is almost as memorable as the lyrics of the song. A decade after the song was recorded, Marks said: The arrangement added to the irony of the whole ...