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"Nobody Gets Me" is a song by American singer-songwriter SZA and the fourth single from her second studio album, SOS (2022). It was sent to Italian radio on January 6, 2023, and US contemporary hit radio four days later.
The two appeared on versions of Summer Walker's "No Love" and Flo Milli's "Never Lose Me". Doja Cat and SZA duetted on "Kiss Me More" and the "Kill Bill" remix. SZA co-wrote one SOS track with Lizzo and featured on the latter's "Special" remix. Brandun DeShay, one of SZA's earliest collaborators, co-wrote three songs from See.SZA.Run.
Download QR code; Print/export ... (Summer Walker and SZA song) No Szns; Nobody Gets Me; Normal Girl; Notice Me (SZA song) O. The Odyssey (SZA song)
Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Nobody Gets Me; Normal Girl; Notice Me (SZA song) O. The Odyssey (SZA song) ...
SZA released her second studio album, SOS, in 2022. It broke several records in R&B/hip-hop and overall charts. It broke several records in R&B/hip-hop and overall charts. In the US, it opened with the biggest streaming week ever for an R&B album, spent 10 weeks atop the Billboard 200, [ 5 ] and ended 2023 as the country's third-biggest album ...
Kill Bill" and "Nobody Gets Me" were promoted to US contemporary hit radio on January 10, 2023. [78] On December 13, 2022, SZA took to social media to announce merchandise for SOS, which included the St. Louis Blues jersey she wore in the cover art. At the same time, she revealed she would be touring North America in early 2023 in support of ...
Kill Bill" was SZA's first number-one on the Billboard Global 200 and Hot 100 charts, [145] [146] while "Snooze" was the only song to chart on the Hot 100 for the entirety of 2023. [ 147 ] SOS spent its first seven weeks at number one on the Billboard 200 —the longest run for a female album in the decade and the first R&B album to achieve ...
A more braggadocious piece within her discography, "30 for 30" allows SZA to "bask in her accomplishments" accentuated with "soaring strings and booming 808's". [2] The song starts off with a spoken-word sample, taken from the R&B/funk band Switch song "I Call Your Name", with lead singer Bobby DeBarge admitting to indulging in "immature things" as well as "painful doubts and insecurities ...