Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
She is best known for her singles "Damn Right" and "Comic Sans" (featuring Jack Harlow). [2] She was born and raised in New Jersey, [3] and studied in the Clive Davis Music Institute of NYU for her freshman year, but has since taken a break to focus on music. [4] Her songs have been described as pop, R&B, rap and trap. [5]
Damn Right, I've Got the Blues is the seventh studio album by Blues guitarist Buddy Guy. The album has been described by Allmusic and Rolling Stone as a commercial comeback album for Guy [4] [5] after limited recording for the previous 10 years. In 2005 the album was reissued as Damn Right, I've Got The Blues Expanded Edition, featuring two ...
"You Got It (The Right Stuff)" is a 1988 single from New Kids on the Block. The lead vocals were sung by Jordan Knight and Donnie Wahlberg . The second single from the group's second album Hangin' Tough , it peaked at number 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 Singles Chart in early 1989, while topping the UK charts in November 1989. [ 2 ]
"She's Got It" is a 1956 song by Little Richard, written by John Marascalco and Little Richard. [1] It was originally called "I Got It" (and Richard had also recorded a version with that title), but the lyrics were rewritten for the film The Girl Can't Help It . [ 2 ]
"Bitches Ain't Shit" was originally a hidden track, but was added to the cover art from the 2001 reissue onwards. [5] It was a last-minute replacement for "Deep Cover", which the label felt was too risky to release on The Chronic in the wake of the "Cop Killer" controversy.
Former University of Georgia football mascot UGA X, an English bulldog with the winningest record in program history, died peacefully in his sleep at 10 years old.
"She Got It Made" is the second single from Plies' fourth album, Goon Affiliated. The track has uncredited vocals by the American recording artist Maejor and was released onto the Internet on March 5, 2010. "She Got It Made" samples Rupert Holmes' hit song "Escape (The Piña Colada Song)". [1]
Teddy Craven of The Daily Campus described "Duckworth" as Damn's "strongest song" and "ends the album with a fantastic philosophical mic-drop." [11] Craven compared the track to "Sing About Me, I'm Dying of Thirst" from Lamar's second studio album Good Kid, M.A.A.D City, a song that also tells personal stories about the unexpected consequences of Lamar's music. [11]