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"Baby Can I Hold You" is the third single released by American contemporary folk artist Tracy Chapman, released in October 1988. The song reached the top 50 in the United States, unlike its predecessor, "Talkin' 'bout a Revolution", but it failed to become Chapman's second top 40 hit, peaking at number 48.
2000: "Baby Can I Hold You" with Luciano Pavarotti from the DVD/Album Pavarotti and Friends for Cambodia and Tibet; 2001: "The Maker" with Dave Matthews on October 21, 2001, at the Bridge School Benefit; 2005: "Ain't No Sunshine" with Buddy Guy from his album Bring 'Em In; Covered songs: 1990: "The House of the Rising Sun" – Rubáiyát (LP)
Chapman stated that she had "repeatedly denied" permission for "Baby Can I Hold You" to be sampled. The lawsuit alleged that Minaj had engaged in copyright infringement (a) by creating the song "Sorry" and (b) by distributing it; she requested an injunction to prevent Minaj from releasing the song. According to the lawsuit, Chapman has a policy ...
Tracy Chapman (1988) ... and the sensual love song “Baby Can I Hold You” has become something of a standard, covered by everyone from Boyzone to Andrea Martin. Then there’s the all-time ...
Jennifer Esmerelda Hylton, known professionally as Foxy Brown, is a Jamaican reggae singer. Her first introduction to the reggae charts was via the Steely & Clevie-produced versions of Tracy Chapman's "(Sorry) Baby, Can I Hold You Tonight" and "Fast Car," the former even entering Billboard's Black Singles Chart. [1]
Sonja Flemming/CBS Update: 2/13/24 at 3:00 p.m. ET. Chapman’s success continued beyond the iTunes chart and into the Billboard Hot 100. Her original version of “Fast Car” re-entered the ...
But for a moment, a Cleveland native stole the show. Folk singer Tracy Chapman, who rarely performs live, sang a duet with country star Luke Combs. The pair sang Chapman's 1988 hit "Fast Car ...
"Sorry" was created as a collaboration between Minaj and Nas. [1] Rolling Stone described the song as a "love story of sorts," as Minaj and Nas had dated in 2017. [2] " Sorry" was intended as a remake of the Shelly Thunder song of the same name; Thunder's song was a reggae cover of the Tracy Chapman song "Baby Can I Hold You."