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"All Girls Are the Same" (alternatively stylized in all caps) [1] is the debut single by American rapper Juice Wrld. It was released as the lead single from his debut studio album, Goodbye & Good Riddance on April 13, 2018, after its music video premiered in February.
Following the video's release, Interscope Records signed Higgins for $3 million [26] and a remix featuring Lil Yachty was previewed but never officially released. [27] "All Girls Are the Same" was critically acclaimed, receiving a Best New Music designation from Pitchfork. [28] It was released as a single in April.
"Same Girl" is a song by American R&B singers R. Kelly and Usher from the former's 2007 album, Double Up. The song was recorded over a year by upcoming R&B group Nephu. R. Kelly and Usher's version leaked to the Internet on May 2, 2007, and later leaked to radio stations. This song was number 26 on Rolling Stone ' s list of the 100 Best Songs ...
"Kill This Love" – a song by South Korean girl group Blackpink released on April 2019. The song's music video broke the records for the biggest music video premiere on YouTube, with 979,000 million concurrent viewers, [53] and the most-watched music video within 24 hours, with 56.7 million views in its first day. [54]
[8] [9] On the same day, Rolling Stone announced that the remix album is set to be released on 11 October 2024. [ 10 ] [ 11 ] The remixes featuring Billie Eilish and Lorde would be a part of the album's track list, along with the remixes featuring Addison Rae , Yung Lean , and Robyn , that were released as a part of the rollout of its original ...
"Same Girl" is a song recorded by American entertainer Jennifer Lopez for her eighth studio album, A.K.A. (2014). The song was written by Lopez and Chris Brown in collaboration with the song's producers Antwan "Amadeus" Thompson, Charles "Chizzy" Stephens, and Ryan "Ryghtous" Tedder, while Cory Rooney handled vocal production of the song.
All-Women Groups Rarely Perform At U.S. Music Festivals. ... Interface for developers to remix polling data assembled by HuffPost Pollster. 7/12 Olympics Medal Tracker.
Mike Wass of Idolator felt the song is a "hip-hop-flavored banger". [8] Jael Goldfine from Paper wrote that the song is a "moody, masochistic, tongue-in-cheek new collaboration" as Goulding "dares an ex to say all the mean, ugly things broken-hearted people say to each other". [9]