Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Hamilton released "Hands Up!" with Kets4eki and Pixel Hood in 2022. The song became his first to chart on the Billboard Hot Dance/Electronic Songs chart, reaching number 14. He released his debut studio album, Sassy Scene, on March 3, 2023. Hamilton also collaborated with Odetari on the song "GMFU", a top-5 hit on the chart.
The surprise release of "Money Without Me" was seen as a "bridge" between "two defining moments in Kendrick's career—his Section.80 origins and the present-day dominance of his GNX era." Hit Channel wrote that "The song's poignant storytelling and throwback production style are drawing praise from fans, with many expressing nostalgia for the ...
Meanwhile, spinning the original's Get money hook is the Take money refrain of rapper 2Pac's June 1996 single "Hit 'Em Up," [4] the legendary diss track—answering B.I.G's renowned single "Who Shot Ya," a February 1995 release by Sean "Puffy" Comb's Bad Boy label—that maligns and menaces B.I.G. and Puffy, and shares an instrumental with the ...
First he needs love and to get the love he needs money. Once he gets the money, he gets the love but after a while he still doesn't feel fulfilled and realizes he needs to have children. "Getcha Some" is cited as an example of country-rap , due to the use of a strong beat and rhythmically spoken, essentially amelodic lyrics.
"Got Your Money" is a song by American rapper Ol' Dirty Bastard, released in 1999 as the only single from his second studio album, Nigga Please. Both the single and the album were the last to be released by Ol' Dirty Bastard, before his death in 2004.
The NFL playoffs are nearly in sight and the heat is on for some teams still in the fight to make the postseason.. Week 15 saw the number of teams that have qualified for the playoffs increase to ...
Get the Money is the third and final studio album by American rock band Taylor Hawkins and the Coattail Riders. It was released on November 8, 2019. [ 1 ] It features 10 songs, including "I Really Blew It" and "Middle Child", for which music videos were recorded.
[7] Jordan Sargent of PopMatters criticized the album for lacking the retro-soul beats of Purple Haze that had energy and instead contains lackluster synth production with lyrics that border on self-parody, saying that, "On Crime Pays he swings too far in the opposite direction, coming back with an album that is unadventurous and uninteresting."