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The Chic rhythm section of Rodgers, Edwards, and Thompson provided instrumental back-up for the successful 1980 album Diana for Diana Ross that ended up selling over ten million albums internationally, with Rodgers and Edwards producing. It yielded the four weeks at number-one single "Upside Down" and the top ten song "I'm Coming Out". [4] "
Ex Girlfriend was an American girl group whose line-up comprised Monica Boyd, Julia Robertson, Stacy Francis, and Tisha Hunter.The group was originally formed in the mid-1980s under the group name Petite, consisting of Kimberly Davis, Monica Boyd, Julia Robertson, and Tisha Hunter.
Kim Davis (born in Toronto, Ontario) is a Canadian singer-songwriter. After starting her career as a background singer for artists such as John Legend, [1] she began recording and self-releasing solo material in 2007. Davis' lyrics draw from real life experiences, and her music fuses R&B, soul, hip hop, and reggae. [2]
Kimberly Davis may refer to: Amber O'Neal, a professional wrestler whose legal name is Kimberly Dawn Davis; Kimberly Davis, American singer-songwriter and member of ...
A piano rendition of "Get Up" came out on May 3, 2019, with an accompanying music video later that month on May 15. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] On May 31, 2019, the “Get Up” EP was released, which features the regular and piano versions, as well as a new acoustic version of the song.
Get Up with It is an album by American jazz musician Miles Davis. [4] Released by Columbia Records on November 22, 1974, it collected previously unreleased material that Davis had recorded between 1970 and 1974, some of which dated from the sessions for his studio albums Jack Johnson (1971) and On the Corner (1972).
Get Up (Bryan Adams album), 2015; Get Up (Richie Kotzen album) or the title song, 2004; Get Up! (Ben Harper and Charlie Musselwhite album) or the title song, 2013 Get Up, by NewJeans, 2023
Upon the release, Bill Coleman from Billboard felt the song is "not as catchy" as the group's breakthrough smash. [6] Greg Kot from Chicago Tribune complimented rapper Ya Kid K's phrasing as "exotically enthusiastic and seductive", noting that catch phrases such as "Get up, get busy" "have become as ubiquitous as black leather miniskirts at dance clubs from Los Angeles to Berlin."