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In "My Baby", Lil' Romeo rapped, "After high school, I'm going straight to the pros." In 2004, the Orlando Sentinel referred to that lyric in an article about Romeo playing basketball at Beverly Hills High School . [ 1 ]
"My Baby" is a song by American rapper and singer Lil Skies featuring fellow American singer Zhavia Ward. Written alongside producer CashMoneyAP , it was released on April 29, 2021, as the lead single from the deluxe version of Skies' second studio album Unbothered (2021).
"My Baby" (Pretenders song), 1987 "My Baby" (The Temptations song), 1965 "My Baby", by Britney Spears from Circus, 2008 "My Baby", by Janet Jackson from Damita Jo, 2004
"My Baby" is a 1980 single from Australian rock band Cold Chisel, the third released from the album East and the first of the band's singles not to be written by pianist Don Walker. This was the only track credited solely to bass player Phil Small on any of the band's albums apart from "Notion For You" on the 1994 rarities album Teenage Love ...
In 1987 a claymation music video was produced for "My Baby Just Cares for Me" by Aardman Animations [11] and directed by Peter Lord. The video prominently features live action footage showing details of a piano, brushes on a snare drum, and a double bass as they play the song. The two focal characters are represented by a singing cat in a club ...
The line opened at 4.5 points and moved 1.5 points in Ohio State’s favor, while the total has dropped by a point. Nearly 70% of the money is on the over, however, as the total currently sits at ...
"My Baby" is a 1965 hit single recorded by the Temptations for the Gordy label. Written by Miracles members Smokey Robinson , Bobby Rogers , and Pete Moore and produced by Robinson, the song was a top 20 pop hit in the United States , and a top 5 hit on the R&B charts.
"My Baby" is a love song to Hynde's baby daughter. [3] [4] Vic Garbarini of Musician magazine also suggested that the song is about the baby within Hynde herself, in the sense of "something being born" into a "new life. [3] Allmusic critic Matthew Greenwald describes the acoustic guitar melody that begins the song as sounding like an Irish folk ...