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It was released through Night Street and Warner Records on April 4, 2024, from his debut studio album Fireworks & Rollerblades (2024). The song was written by Boone, Jack LaFrantz and Malay, the latter who also produced the song. The song charted worldwide after the album's release peaking at number 60 in the US and number 55 in the UK.
Maddie & Tae are an American female country music duo composed of Maddie Font (née Marlow) and Tae Kerr (née Dye), [1] both of whom are singers, songwriters, and guitarists. The duo was signed to the revived Dot Records in 2014. [ 2 ]
Alexx Calise (born June 28, 1985), is an American singer, songwriter, and musician. [1] She is best known for her solo work and her other musical project (with songwriting partner Dennis Morehouse), BBatfarm.
September 13, 2024 at 10:10 PM. ... “We still treat it like a baby,” Maddie Marlow Font, 29, tells PEOPLE. ... But the new music also reflects the duo’s evolution, not only as artists, but ...
In 2017, Dot Records closed its doors, prompting Maddie & Tae to switch to Mercury Records in 2018. The same year, they released the single, "Friends Don't." [1] The song reached the top 40 of the Billboard country chart by early 2019. [4] Their next release was 2019 EP titled One Heart to Another. It was followed by the single, "Die from a ...
The music video for the song was released on the same day as the single. [7] In the video, Anne-Marie embarks on a train journey driven by Jack and Luke Patterson after splitting from her disloyal partner while Grace Chatto serves tea and plays the cello. The Cry Baby Express train was built by Chatto's father.
"Boyz Don't Cry" has been described as a country song with guitars and trap drums. It consists of one verse, in which Rod Wave sings about his sadness from a breakup, immoral people on the Internet, his happiness from receiving collect calls from an incarcerated friend, and appreciating what he has gained as a musician.
According to the review aggregator Metacritic, Cry received "generally favorable reviews" based on a weighted average score of 69 out of 100 from 14 critic scores. [7] Alisha Mughal of Exclaim! called the album a "gentler and more vulnerable" than the band's debut album, and writing that the album "will make you cry, because Gonzalez knows what he's doing.