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It was written by Furtado and produced by Gerald Eaton and Brian West for her debut studio album, Whoa, Nelly! (2000). Released as the album's first single on September 25, 2000, it became a worldwide hit the following year, peaking at number one in Portugal, number two in Australia and New Zealand, number five in the United Kingdom, and number ...
"Lil Bit" is a song recorded by American hip hop artist Nelly with country rock band Devo. It marks the third collaboration between the artists after the remix of Devo's hit single "Cruise" in 2013, [1] and the song "Walk Away" from Nelly's album M.O. in the same year. [2] It is the lead single from Nelly's country-influenced eighth studio ...
The original version, released on Parlophone R 4219 in October 1956, [2] was recorded by English child actress Mandy Miller with an orchestra conducted by Phil Cardew. [3] It was arranged by Ron Goodwin and produced by George Martin.
Nelly explains his method of writing in the book How to Rap, describing how he freestyles most of the lyrics before going back over them to "make it a little tighter", [68] he generally writes in the studio rather than at home, [69] he normally comes up with a chorus for a song before writing the verses, [70] and he likes to write to the music ...
"Lie" is a song by Nigerian singer Kizz Daniel. It was released on 6 August 2021 through Flyboy I.N.C and Empire Distribution as the only single from his first EP Barnabas . The afro pop single was produced by Philkeyz with co-production from Ayzed, Blaisebeatz , Vtek and Miki.
The song was written by Nelly, Jermaine Dupri, Paul Wall, Ali, Gipp and James Phillips; it contains samples of Destiny's Child's "Soldier", written by Beyoncé Knowles, Kelendria Rowland, Tenitra Williams, Garrett Hamler, and Rich Harrison; it also contains samples of "Left Me Lonely" by MC Shan. Production was handled by Dupri.
"N Dey Say" is a song by American rapper Nelly. It was released on January 24, 2005, as the third and final single from his album Suit (2004). The song uses a musical sample of "True" by Spandau Ballet, so songwriter Gary Kemp was given a writing credit.
On April 15, 2002, "Hot in Herre" received over 760,000 streams on AOL Music's First Listen feature following its debut, setting a record for the website. [4] The song was the inaugural winner of the Grammy Award for Best Male Rap Solo Performance at the 45th Annual Grammy Awards on February 23, 2003. [5]