Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Robbery" is a song by American rapper Juice Wrld. It was released on February 13, 2019, via Grade A Productions through exclusive licensing to Interscope Records , as the lead single for his second studio album, Death Race for Love .
"Robbery" is a song by Australian pop rock duo Lime Cordiale, released on 20 September 2019 as the fifth single from their second studio album 14 Steps to a Better You (2020). The song was polled at number 7 in the Triple J Hottest 100, 2019 .
The music video for the song was released few hours later on the same date, on King Von's official YouTube channel. It is centered around a group of friends from Chicago that robs some drug dealers who will have revenge, unleashing at the same time, a circle of vengeance. [6] [7]
In May of that year its fourth single "Inappropriate Behaviour" premiered on Triple J. [22] The album's fifth single "Robbery" (September), a song about "chasing after a girl who has stolen your heart", reached the ARIA singles chart top 100. [23] They undertook a national tour in support of its release. [24]
Robbery is the fifth studio album by American singer-songwriter Teena Marie, released in September 18, 1983. It is her first album for Epic Records , following her acrimonious departure from Motown the previous year.
"The Robbery", a song by Anne Dudley from the Buster film soundtrack, 1988 "Robberies" (song), by King Von, 2023; Sports
The official music video for "Robbers" was released on 27 April 2014, [6] directed by Tim Mattia. A large portion of the video was filmed in Taft, California. [7] The video stars Healy and actress Chelsea Schuchman as a couple who rob a shop to obtain money to "fund their alcohol and drug addiction", with the other band members appearing as their friends. [6]
The song combines a main theme written by Rutherford against a middle section written by Banks, and was designed to sound like Led Zeppelin's "Kashmir". [ 8 ] [ 6 ] "Robbery, Assault and Battery" was mostly written by Banks, in an attempt to replicate the humour in some of Gabriel's lyrics.