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"Coming Home" is a song by American musical trio Diddy – Dirty Money, released by Bad Boy and Interscope Records on November 16, 2010, as the fourth single from their only studio album, Last Train to Paris (2010).
Diddy – Dirty Money was an American musical trio, composed of R&B singers Dawn Richard and Kalenna Harper, and rapper Sean Combs. The group, formed and introduced by the latter in July 2009, [ 1 ] refers to their billing with Combs, while the "Dirty Money" act refers solely to Richard and Harper.
On November 21, 2010, Diddy-Dirty Money appeared at the American Music Awards (2010) where they performed "Coming Home". [25] On December 5, 2010, Diddy released The Prelude - Last Train to Paris , a free mixtape of seven songs from the upcoming album exclusively through Vogue .com. [ 6 ] Later that same day, the group appeared on Saturday ...
"Gotta Move On" peaked at number 79 on the Billboard Hot 100 and became Diddy's first entry on the chart since his 2010 single "Coming Home" (with Dirty Money featuring Skylar Grey). The song contains additional vocals and songwriting from rapper Wale. The accompanying music video was directed by singer Teyana Taylor under the pseudonym "Spike ...
A new video of Sean “Diddy” Combs and Justin Bieber has leaked amid the rapper’s multiple lawsuits and scandals.. In the clip, shared via X earlier this week, Diddy, 54, can be seen chatting ...
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs. Gregg DeGuire/Getty Images for The Recording Academy Sean “Diddy” Combs has faced a lot of ups and downs in his career and personal life. Diddy began his career in the ...
When music mogul Sean "Diddy" Combs was the subject last week of a bombshell indictment that charged him with racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution, it sent ...
"Ass on the Floor" is an atmospheric dance-floor filler, first released as part of Swizz Beatz' Monster Mondays on November 29, 2010. [3] [4] Bradon Soderberg from The Village Voice pointed out the song's "swooping Moroder synths", [5] which were described by MTV's Mawuse Ziegbe as "a spacey sheen of synth chords".