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The music video was released on October 3, 2018. The video follows Juice Wrld as he parties nonstop with his friends in a luxurious mansion. Eventually, the rapper passes away in the video and visits his own memorial. [3] The video was directed by R.J. Sanchez and has 164 million views as of September 24 2021. [4]
Goodbye & Good Riddance is the debut studio album by American rapper Juice Wrld.It was released on May 23, 2018, by Grade A Productions and Interscope Records. [7] Production was primarily handled by Nick Mira alongside several other record producers, including Benny Blanco, Cardo, CBMix, Don Rob, Dre Moon, Ghost Loft, and Mitch Mula.
Juice (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the soundtrack album to Ernest Dickerson's 1992 crime film Juice. It was released on December 31, 1991, through SOUL/MCA Records and consists mainly of hip-hop and R&B music. [8] The album peaked at number 17 on the Billboard 200 and number 3 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums in the United States.
Juice Wrld's second studio album Death Race for Love, was released on March 8, 2019. Led by the singles " Robbery " and " Hear Me Calling ", it debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 with 165,000 album-equivalent units.
"Bandit" is a song by American rappers Juice Wrld and YoungBoy Never Broke Again, released as a single on October 4, 2019. It served as the final single released by Juice Wrld as a lead artist before his death, [a] suffering from a seizure at Chicago's Midway Airport on December 8, 2019, a few days after his 21st birthday.
"Lace It" is a song by American rappers Juice Wrld and Eminem and American record producer Benny Blanco. It was released through Grade A Productions and Interscope Records on December 16, 2023, as the lead single from the former's fifth and final studio album, The Party Never Ends (2024).
It shows footage of Juice Wrld rapping to the song in the studio, [2] [5] in the company of his friends. [6] The clip is also interspersed with people running for shelter from asteroids bringing the apocalypse. [5] [6] Los Angeles burns under the attack and the Earth explodes at the end of the video. [2]
The song received generally positive reviews. Critics have praised Juice Wrld's singing of the chorus and described it as sounding even more sadder given his death in December 2019. [2] [6] Fred Thomas called it a "mesmerizing melodic hook". [3] Mitch Findlay of HotNewHipHop praised the production of the song, calling it "melancholic yet ...