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"She Ain't You" is a song by American singer Chris Brown. The mid-tempo R&B record was written by Brown, Jean Baptiste, Ryan Buendia, Kevin McCall and Jason Boyd, and was produced by Free School. It was sent to urban contemporary radio in the United States on March 28, 2011, as the fourth US single from Brown's fourth studio album, F.A.M.E. (2011).
On January 1, 2014, "She Ain't You" was voted the No. 18 song of year on The Pulse (Sirius XM) "Top 30 Countdown Of 2013". [3] On January 24, 2014, New Hollow signed a multi-album recording contract with LA Reid and Epic Records. "She Ain't You" was re-released and charted on both the Mediabase Top 40 and Hot AC charts.
In the United States, the song peaked at number one on the Billboard Hot Dance Club Songs chart, and became the first number-one single for both Brown and Benassi. [63] "She Ain't You" was released to urban radio in the United States on March 28, 2011, as the fourth US single from F.A.M.E.. [64]
It is a reissue of The Dream with five new songs, duets with Brent Cobb, Jordan Davis, Trisha Yearwood, Little Big Town and Lori McKenna & Hillary Lindsey. Whitters' fourth album, Raised , was released on March 18, 2022 and became her first album to reach the Billboard charts, debuting at #18 on the Heatseekers Albums chart and staying on the ...
A clean version music video was released on EMI's YouTube channel on July 13, 2009 under the title "She Ain't Got... (Swing Batta, Batta)". [12] She is seen accidentally finding out through a short text message in her love interest's (played by Sean Newman) cell phone that he is cheating on her.
The three wrote the song in March 2021. Originally, they were working on a different song when Whitters came up with the lyric "I'm everything she is and everything she ain't". The other two began adding lines and developed the song into "a putdown of the male character's current girlfriend". The recording features Tyndell singing harmony vocals.
"Sorry" is a song by American singer and songwriter Beyoncé. It is the fourth track on her sixth studio album, Lemonade (2016), released through Parkwood Entertainment and Columbia Records. The song's music video is part of Beyoncé's 2016 film Lemonade, aired on HBO alongside the album's release. [1]
MusicMagpie, a British online retailer, stated that Snoop Dogg has been featured on approximately 583 songs—although they included Snoop Dogg’s featured singles. [1] VladTV , an interview broadcast hosted by DJ Vlad also noted that Snoop Dogg has been featured on the most songs among rap-artists, as well as an artist in general with 583 (or ...