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"Democracy" was released as the sixth song on Leonard Cohen's 1992 album The Future. [4] It features American musician Jeff Fisher , [ 5 ] who received multiple credits on the album. [ 4 ] The song begins with drums played at a high tempo in the rhythm of a march , which persist through the song. [ 6 ]
The music video for "Broken Clocks" was co-directed by SZA and Dave Free, and was released on March 30, 2018. [4] The video features SZA at a summer camp in the wilderness. As the song comes to a close, the camera cuts to SZA as a stripper, lying unconscious on the bathroom floor of a strip club, following an altercation with another woman. [5]
After a long series of delays, SZA revealed the release date of Lana to be December 20, 2024. [18] The announcement came with a teaser for the song. According to the announcement, the music video for "Drive" was to premiere on the same day. [19] The song was released at midnight EST, a few hours before Lana, [20] as a Spotify-exclusive track. [21]
The saga of SZA’s long-delayed “Lana” album — which began as a deluxe edition of her Grammy-winning sophomore full-length “SOS,” then became its own album and has had a constantly ...
First teased in December 2018; music video teased in May 2019. [194] Had its live debut during an Australian tour in July 2019. [195] "Nightbird" Uploaded on SoundCloud by SZA under an anonymous account in 2021, alongside "Joni" and the SOS single "I Hate U". [196] "Joni" [AV] Uploaded on SoundCloud alongside "Nightbird" and "I Hate U". [198]
After the Variety interview, SZA performed "BMF" alongside two other SOS outtakes at a September 2023 concert in Brooklyn, New York. [10] The song was released to contemporary hit radio stations on January 7, 2025, [11] the same day "30 for 30" was released to rhythmic contemporary radio. [12] The song is the fifth track on the album. [13]
Shortly before its release, SZA premiered a music video for the track "Drive", where a snippet of "Crybaby" plays at the end. In the outro, the camera pans to SZA, wearing bug-eye prosthetics, as she moves around some grass by the roadside. [15] The song has received praise from critics.
SZA promoted the extended play with the release of a music video for the EP's lead single, "Ice.Moon". [29] SZA and Punch stayed in contact, and after SZA began garnering attention with the release of her two EPs, TDE stepped in to sign her on July 14, 2013, making her the label's first female artist.