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Sweat is still in great voice, and it's his personality that carries Rebirth, even when it sounds similar to his work in the past." [1] Vibe ' Jason King felt that Rebirth "probably won’t win Sweat any new fans, but he certainly won’t lose any. Despite a reliance on talk boxes and synth strings, and predictable references to two-ways and ...
Keith Sweat (born July 22, 1961) is an American singer and songwriter. An early figure in the new jack swing musical movement, he is known for his collection of hits including " I Want Her ," " Make It Last Forever ," " I'll Give All My Love to You ," " Make You Sweat ," " Get Up on It ," " Twisted ," and "Nobody."
Keith Sweat Live. Released: February 4, 2003 [18] Label: Elektra (62855) Formats: CD, music download; 86: 34 2007 Sweat Hotel Live. Released: June 12, 2007 [19] Label: Shout! Factory (10477) Formats: CD, music download — — "—" denotes releases that did not chart or receive certification.
Last night’s Verzuz with R&B royalty Bobby Brown and Keith Sweat thrilled thousands of social media users, who reveled in... View Article The post Keith Sweat goes viral for more reasons than ...
Rebirth (2002) Keith Sweat Live (2003) Sweat Hotel Live (2007) Keith Sweat Live is the first live album by American singer 'Keith Sweat. Recorded live in Washington ...
The music is heavily influenced by the New Jack Swing genre of R&B. Prominent artists and producers of this sound contributed to the soundtrack, including Guy with Teddy Riley, Keith Sweat, Color Me Badd, and Johnny Gill; Al B. Sure! produced the track "Get It Together (Black Is a Force)," performed by F.S. Effect.
Keith Sweat is the fifth studio album by the American singer Keith Sweat. It was released by Elektra Records on June 25, 1996, in the United States. The single, "Twisted", made it to number two on the US Billboard Hot 100, his biggest hit ever on that chart. "Nobody" peaked at number 3 on the same chart.
The song started as an instrumental track by Teddy Riley intended for Keith Sweat's 1987 debut Make It Last Forever, [3] but Sweat ultimately passed on the song. [3] Kemp then recorded a demo of the song, intending for it to be used by another singer; his scratch vocal ended up on the final release.