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Savage Island is the second solo album and US debut album of New Zealand rapper Savage, released in the US on 23 December 2008, and in New Zealand on 23 February 2009. The album won Savage the award for Best Pacific Urban Artist at the Pacific Music Awards in 2010. [1]
Additionally, the song returned to the New Zealand charts, reaching number 23 in August 2008, [1] and Savage won an International Achievement Award at the 2008 New Zealand Music Awards, [19] and an International Breakthrough award was created in his honour at the Pacific Music Awards in New Zealand in May 2009. [20]
The second verse is rapped by 21 Savage, who "mixes gun talk with making sound financial decisions". [5] Near the first half of the song, Baby Tate provides "fluttering vocals" in R&B style closing out of the first part. [4] [6] [7] The beat then switches to a "woozy, bass-bombed wobble that artfully weaves in elements from the song's first ...
"Savage Remix" was met with widespread critical acclaim with praise for Megan and Beyoncé's chemistry and various delivery styles, as well as for fully transforming the song with new verses. The song reached number one on the US Billboard Hot 100 on May 26, 2020, becoming Megan Thee Stallion's first and Beyoncé's seventh number-one single on ...
It was also included on Savage's 2008 album, Savage Island. The song spent seven weeks atop of the New Zealand Singles Chart and placed third overall on New Zealand's year-end chart for 2005. In Australia, the song was released in November 2005 and reached number nine on the ARIA Singles Chart.
Moonshine is the debut solo album by New Zealand hip hop artist Savage, released in 2005. The album includes a bonus track, "Locked Up Remix", by Senegalese singer Akon featuring Savage. In 2005, it reached number two in the New Zealand charts. [4]
"Good Good" is a song by American singers Usher and Summer Walker and Atlanta-based rapper 21 Savage. In addition to the three artists, the track was written by Caleb Ishman, Rafael Ishman, Jaylyn Denaie Macdonald, Keith Thomas, Paul Dawson, Tauren Stovall, and producers Mel & Mus.
Grant Rindner of Variety considered the song one of the "standout cuts" from American Dream which show his chemistry with Metro Boomin. [1] Reviewing the album for Uproxx, Aaron Williams stated that while songs like "Dangerous" "traverse well-worn territory for the lanky Atlantan, they coexist fairly cozily alongside latter-half ballads", adding that 21 Savage "sounds equally convincing while ...