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"Rolling in the Deep" is a song by English singer-songwriter Adele from her second studio album, 21 (2011). It is the lead single and opening track on the album. The song was written by Adele and Paul Epworth .
A few months later, on October 20, 2017, she released a second album, Explicit. This becomes a gold disc. She had a well-publicized feud with her father after he said on his own Facebook that his daughter was under immense psychological pressure and isolated from the realities of the world.
The album's lead single, "Rolling in the Deep", was co-written by Adele and Paul Epworth. [7] It has since been certified eight-times platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) [ 8 ] and won two awards at the 54th Grammy Awards : Record of the Year and Song of the Year . [ 9 ]
The explicit cover is a black-and-white image of a topless woman sitting in a tiled room, surrounded and partially obscured by balloons. When the mixtape was sold separately for retail release on iTunes and in stores in 2015, the cover was censored. [58] Whitesnake – Lovehunter (1979) and Come an' Get It (1981)
Sexually explicit and abusive fake images of Swift began circulating widely this week on the social media platform X. ... a senior writer at Rolling Stone who teaches a course on Swift at New York ...
The first single released from the album was a cover of singer Adele's "Rolling in the Deep", subtitled as "The Aretha Version", which also includes an interpolation of the Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell hit, "Ain't No Mountain High Enough". [14]
NEW YORK (AP) — Marianne Faithfull, the British pop star, muse, libertine and old soul who inspired and helped write some of the Rolling Stones' greatest songs and endured as a torch singer and survivor of the lifestyle she once embodied, has died. She was 78.
The clean version of the 8 Mile soundtrack removes most of the strong language, sexual and violent content. The only word left uncensored on the soundtrack, is the word "ass" (except on "Places to Go" by 50 Cent, where the word "ass" is used twice, but the word was only censored once).