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"Enough (Miami)" is a song by American rapper Cardi B, released on March 15, 2024, through Atlantic Records, as the fifth single from her upcoming second studio album. Her first solo single since " Up " (2021), it was released with an accompanying music video directed by Patience Harding.
Cardi B’s comeback is in full swing, and she’s delivering a message to her haters in her new song. “Me vs. you and you know who they pickin,” raps Cardi, 31, at the start of “Enough ...
American rapper Cardi B has released one studio album, three mixtapes, 39 singles (including 24 as a featured artist), and 17 music videos (as a lead artist). According to the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), she has sold 100 million equivalent units in the United States across albums, singles, and mixtapes, making her the 6th best-selling female digital artist in the country. [1]
When speaking with Apple Music’s Zane Lowe in 2021, Cardi said her fear was a main factor in her delay. “I really wanted to put out an album [in 2020], but I feel like I don’t have the right ...
Cardi B has been sued by a pair of producers for copyright infringement. Joshua Fraustro and Miguel Aguilar, who also go by Kemika1956, claim Cardi stole the beat used in their song “Greasy ...
Its music video was filmed in Little Havana, Miami and has received more than 1.6 billion views. The single topped the US Billboard Hot 100, becoming Cardi B's second number one—the first time a female rapper achieved this in the chart's history, [3] and the first for both Bad Bunny and J Balvin. It also reached the top 10 in Canada, Ireland ...
[9] In an interview with Uproxx before the show, G-Eazy said of the reason behind collaborating with Cardi B: "I'm a super fan of her and everything she's doing right now is incredible. I think she represents where music is today. It's real, it's raw, it's honest, it's pure. It's not contrived, it's not overly thought out or put together.
The move made Cardi B the second female rapper to ever top the chart with a solo hit since Lauryn Hill's "Doo Wop (That Thing)" occupied the throne in 1998, and only the fifth female rapper to top ...