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Coogler wanted Black Panther to include some original songs from Lamar, an idea that Marvel supported, and approached the musician with footage from the film after Lamar had completed work on his album DAMN. [7] Lamar and producer Sounwave were "drawn in by the opening scene and the deep message this movie told."
Daytime Friends is the third studio album by American singer Kenny Rogers for United Artists Records, released in 1977. [4] It was his second major success following the break-up of The First Edition in 1976 (his first album Love Lifted Me was a minor success, with his second, the self-titled Kenny Rogers, going to Number 1 on the US country charts and crossing over to the mainstream pop ...
Nevertheless, Silvestri reprised Göransson's theme for Black Panther when the Avengers head to Wakanda, [83] and went on to reprise numerous character themes in Endgame, including those for Captain America, Ant-Man, Doctor Strange and Captain Marvel. Despite not reprising many themes, Silvestri does bring back several of his own original motifs.
The soundtrack album was released as Black Panther: Wakanda Forever – Music from and Inspired By on November 4, by Roc Nation, Def Jam Recordings, and Hollywood Records, with Rihanna's original single "Lift Me Up" releasing a week before the album, on October 28. The soundtrack album received critical acclaim.
Black Panther: The Album was released on February 9, 2018, [175] while a soundtrack of Göransson's score was released on February 16. [176] An extended play titled Black Panther: Wakanda Remixed, featuring remixes of five cues from Göransson's score, was released on August 16, 2018. Göransson worked with several other artists to create the ...
The song was a number one hit on the Canadian country and adult contemporary charts published by RPM, reaching its peak on both charts for the week of December 31, 1977. [3] [4] Rogers used the song as a b-side to two of his later singles: "Lady" in 1980 and "You Were a Good Friend" in 1983. [1]
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It was recorded by Rogers, Kim Carnes, and James Ingram as a trio song from Rogers' Platinum certified 1984 album of the same name. It was the lead single from Rogers' million selling LP and reached number 15 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart (Rogers' last Pop Top 40 hit in the United States until 1999's " Buy Me a Rose )".