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"I Mean It" is a song by American rapper G-Eazy featuring fellow rapper and record producer Remo (otherwise credited as Remo the Hitmaker). [1] It was released on May 13, 2014, as the fifth single from the former's debut studio album These Things Happen (2014).
"Had Enough" G-Eazy: Halsey "You Should Be Sad" After her song dropped, she called out a fan at her concert for saying her ex's name, later on she said that her relationship with G-Eazy was an abusive one. [173] [174] [175] Nov 20, 2020 "Shots Fired" Megan Thee Stallion: Tory Lanez: Lanez shooting Megan Thee Stallion in both her feet.
Everything's Strange Here is a compilation album by American rapper G-Eazy. Described as a side project, [ 1 ] it was released commercially for streaming only, on June 26, 2020, via RCA Records . Production was handled by several record producers, including Cole M.G.N. , Dakarai Gwitira , Marshmello and Christoph Andersson among others.
G-Eazy has collaborated with Chris Brown twice before "Provide" was released, the first time on G-Eazy's 2015 single "Drifting" and the second time on Brown's 2019 single "Wobble Up", with additional features from Canadian rapper and singer Tory Lanez and Trinidadian-born rapper and singer Nicki Minaj, respectively. However, it serves as the ...
Bebe Rexha and G-Eazy (Getty) Rexha later took the post down from Instagram, but she soon returned to the subject. In a follow-up message on X/Twitter wrote : “Someone from my team had me take ...
It should only contain pages that are G-Eazy songs or lists of G-Eazy songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about G-Eazy songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
On her Stories, Rexha shared a screenshot of a group chat where someone was asking her if she had interest in shooting social content with G-Eazy while in New York pegged to their 2015 ...
Megan Armstrong of Billboard made the metaphor of G-Eazy's rapping being "the devil on one shoulder" and Puth's voice being "the angel on the other [shoulder]". She praised both artists for playing off their contrast in styles. [9] Deepa Lakshmin of MTV News felt "G-Eazy's rap verses blend perfectly with Puth's smooth vocals". [10]