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"Marvins Room" is a song by Canadian recording artist Drake. It is the lead single from Drake's second studio album Take Care. Produced by 40, it features keyboard-based instrumentation and muted bass. "Marvins Room" is performed from the point of view of an inebriated Drake as he calls up an ex-girlfriend and rants about his various ...
On June 9, 2011, a second track titled "Marvins Room" was released via his blog. Drake initially stated that the song would not be featured on Take Care, but because of the song's unexpected success, prompting it was released as a digital and radio single on July 22, 2011, and would be on Take Care. "Trust Issues" was then
Marvin's Room may refer to: "Marvins Room", a song by Drake from the album Take Care; Marvin's Room, by Scott McPherson; Marvin's Room, 1996 adaptation of the play, directed by Jerry Zaks; Marvin's Room (studio), formerly Marvin Gaye Studios; Marvin's Room, a Canadian radio show devoted to rhythm and blues music
“Marvins Room” by Drake (2011) Drake could have multiple songs on this voicemail playlist. It’s a device he’s used often, like on the songs “Can’t Have Everything” and “Look What ...
Despite mixed reviews, Drake's eighth studio album became his 13th No. 1 project (a grand total that includes solo studio albums, collaborations, mixtapes, and compilations).
One example is the single "Marvins Room", which was first posted to the blog site five days after its conception, before it was even slated to be a single off the album. [9] Recently Shebib has helped produce Drake's newer material, co producing the lead single "Started from the Bottom", among other records. [14]
From Beyoncé and Taylor Swift to Adele and classics like Etta James and Otis Redding, Insider ranked the best romantic songs across the decades.
Acting as promotional singles for Take Care, the former was eventually unincluded on the album's final track listing, while "Marvins Room" gained 3× Multi-Platinum certification by the RIAA, [85] as well as peaking at number 21 on the Billboard Hot 100. [86] "Headlines" was released on August 9 as the album's lead single.