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In France, "You da One" debuted at number 64 on November 19, 2011, and reached a 2011 peak of 28. In its ninth week on the chart, February 14, 2012, the song peaked at number 23; it spent 23 weeks on the chart in total. [35] In the Netherlands, "You da One" debuted at number 92 on November 19, 2011, and peaked at number 53 in its third week.
2001 (also referred to as The Chronic 2001 or The Chronic II) is the second studio album by American rapper and producer Dr. Dre.It was released on November 16, 1999, by Aftermath Entertainment and Interscope Records as the follow-up to his 1992 debut album, The Chronic.
The opening track, "You Da One", which was produced by Dr. Luke, is a bouncy mid-tempo song with a Caribbean flavor, and features a dubstep influenced breakdown towards the middle of the song. [25] "Where Have You Been", produced by Dr. Luke and Ester Dean, runs through an acoustic beat and incorporates elements of trance. [25]
Only One Flo (Part 1) Yes Keri Hilson "Toy Soldier" No Boys Allowed "Lose Control / Let Me Down" (feat. Nelly) Sean Kingston "Letting Go (Dutty Love)" (feat. Nicki Minaj) Back 2 Life: Ludacris "I Know You Got a Man" (feat. Flo Rida and Ester Dean) Battle of the Sexes: Nicki Minaj "Super Bass" Pink Friday: Monica "Here I Am" Still Standing ...
"It's Funky Enough" is the debut single by American rapper, The D.O.C., featured as the first track on his 1989 debut album No One Can Do It Better. It spent 18 weeks on the US Top Rap Songs chart, including four at #1. A video shot in black and white was made to promote the song.
Swift’s “Down Bad” lyrics reveal that things might have been a little more complicated behind the scenes. Swift, by the way, hasn’t confirmed the song’s subject. She did discuss its ...
Explicit Game is the second studio album by American rapper Dru Down, his first for Relativity Records, and his first to make the billboard charts. Essentially a re-release of his 1993 debut album, Fools from the Streets , the album features similar cover art, a re-ordered track list, and a few new tracks.
"The Formula" is a song by American rapper The D.O.C. from his 1989 debut album No One Can Do It Better. It was released as the third single to support the album and reached #4 on the Hot Rap Songs and #76 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs charts in April 1990. [3] "The Formula" has been seen as the song that invented G-funk. [4]