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Kesha had previously featured Pitbull on remixes of her songs "Tik Tok" and "Crazy Kids", and Pitbull featured Kesha on a 2009 song, "Girls".In an interview in December 2013, Pitbull said that Rihanna was originally meant to be the featured artist on "Timber", but she had already been asked to be the featured artist on Shakira's "Can't Remember to Forget You" and did not have time to record ...
Now That's What I Call Music! 49, released on February 4, 2014, is the 49th edition of the Now! series in the United States. [1] The album features three Billboard Hot 100 number-one hits: "Timber", "Royals", and "Wrecking Ball".
Pitbull released his ninth studio album and second Spanish album Dale in 2015. It won Pitbull his first Grammy Award. He followed this with his tenth studio album, Climate Change, on March 17, 2017. Pitbull's fourth compilation album, Greatest Hits, was released on December 1, 2017, and features two new recordings.
The "Timber" music video was originally titled “Pitbull – Timber (Official Video) ft. Kesha,” has since been changed to “Pitbull – Timber (Official Video)." A credit for the pop star was ...
The song vacated number-one for a week on 11 January 2014, being replaced by "Timber" by Kesha and Pitbull before returning to the top spot. Overall, thirty-eight different singles peaked at number-one in 2014, with Ed Sheeran and Sam Smith (3) having the joint most singles hit that position (including artist's participation on the Band Aid 30 ...
Meltdown EP is an extended play (EP) by American rapper Pitbull, released on November 22, 2013 through Mr. 305, Polo Grounds, and RCA Records. [3]The EP can be purchased individually, or can be found attached onto the end of the Global Warming album under the 2013 reissue titled Global Warming: Meltdown.
Timber (Pitbull song) Toma (song) Tu Cuerpo; V. Vida 23; W. Watagatapitusberry; We Are One (Ole Ola) We Are Strong (Pitbull song) Wild Wild Love This page ...
"Pitbull delivers some Little Havana to the club scene with "I Know You Want Me (Calle Ocho)." The clever meshing of reggaetón with Euro dance music signals what looks like a multiformat smash. At the core is an acoustic guitar and a sizzling rhythm, with hot horns in the form of a sample that just keeps on giving: Chicago's "Street Player ...