"Be Careful" is a song recorded by American rapper Cardi B. It was released on March 29, 2018, as the third single from her debut studio album Invasion of Privacy (2018). The song was written by Cardi B, Jordan Thorpe, and produced by Boi-1da, Vinylz, and Frank Dukes. It contains an interpolation from "Ex-Factor", written and performed by Lauryn Hill, which itself samples "Can It Be All So Simple", written and performed by Wu-Tang Clan. The latter song also samples "The Way We Were". Therefore, Hill, the eight members of Wu-Tang Clan, and Marvin Hamlisch, Alan Bergman and Marilyn Bergman are credited among the composers.[1][2]

"Be Careful" peaked at number 11 on the US Billboard Hot 100, and topped the Rhythmic Songs chart. Internationally it reached the top 40 in Canada, Ireland, New Zealand and the United Kingdom. The song was certified triple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). It received a nomination for Best Rap Performance at the 61st Annual Grammy Awards.[3] On April 7, 2018, Cardi B performed the song on Saturday Night Live, where she revealed the pregnancy of her first child.[4]


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Cardi B performs the hook using a softly sung vocal style over a "laidback" beat. The song also comprises "flickering" hi-hats and "slick" synths.[12] Lyrically, "Be Careful" is a song about infidelity, where the performer warns her cheating partner and asks him to treat her better.[13][14] During an interview, Cardi B expressed she drew inspiration from past relationships, while denying that the song was directed at her fianc Offset.[15]

"Be Careful" debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 at 16 on April 14, 2018, before rising and peaking at 11 the next week after the release of Invasion of Privacy. The song spent 20 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100.[16]

Directed by Jora Frantzis, the song's music video premiered on May 21, 2018. The clip opens with a wedding in a church filled with Jesus statues and crucifixes located in the middle of the dessert. Cardi B walks down the aisle in a wedding dress. The clip shifts to a darker hue as the rapper returns to the church, this time for her husband's funeral.[17][18] The music video was filmed at the Sanctuary Adventist Church in Lancaster, California.[19]

In a new interview with Hear 2 Zen, FILTER frontman Richard Patrick revealed that the song "Be Careful What You Wish For" from the band's latest album, "The Algorithm", was written about "a fan that has gone way too far and has stalked some of my friends and has said some really bad things about them. And they're all figments of his imagination," Richard said. " And I tried to explain this to him very, very gently, just, like, 'Hey, bro, that did not happen.' He was saying things that were just insane. And I mean that in the nicest way possible. He was saying things that were just delusional, and I had to kind of bring him back to reality and just tell him, like, 'Dude, this might be in your head.' And it's scary."

Richard previously discussed the lyrical inspiration for "Be Careful What You Wish For" last August in an interview with Troy Culpan of May The Rock Be With You. At the time, Richard said: "I read a lot of the messages that come in through iMessage or Instagram or Twitter. And I get some DMs, and I got one that was really, really scary; the guy was a nut. He was name-dropping friends of mine and saying stuff that he was gonna do. And I was really distraught over it. Unfortunately, this is kind of the sad part of being famous, is that there's people that know everything about me, but I don't know anything about them. And it's kind of scary. And be careful what you wish for, 'cause with success in music comes fame and stuff like that, and you have to be very careful because there's some crazies out there, for sure."

He continued: "I get myself into trouble because politically, I kind of say what I wanna say; I don't really hold back. And I get a lot of terrible things said back to me from [Donald] Trump supporters or people that are really kind of crazy. So I just have to be kind of careful what I put out there, unfortunately. I mean, they've said some terrible things to me."

"Be Careful What You Eat" is a song from episode 23 of Animaniacs. The song sings many chemical ingredients in food. The music is adapted from Jacques Offenbach's "Infernal Galop" from Orpheus in the Underworld, otherwise known as the can-can, while the lyrics are by Randy Rogel. The song appears as the fifteenth track on the album Animaniacs with a different final verse.

Almost the entirety of Be Careful is dedicated to the unnamed cheater. "Be careful with me, do you know what you're doing? Whose feelings that you're hurting and bruising? You gon' gain the whole world but is it worth the girl that you're losing?" she sings on the chorus. "Yeah, it's not a threat, it's a warning."

For pety reasons, I lived under a rock in a corner for over half of my teenage life. I closed myself off in order to sustain relationships with a limited amount of people. I thought I could keep on their good side if I just did this or that. I have since liberated myself to the freedom of following my heart instead of chasing others. When I see people I'm close to living the same prison-style life that I was forced into it hurts my heart. It makes me wonder why sometimes its so hard to clear the glass and look outside your little bubble. Go out and find adventure. Live like it's your last day. I have a favorite song for this idea "One Life, One Chance" by H2O, but now I can sing my own version.

I fuckin' totally agree!

in fact, it's songs like this that makes me actually take notice of this band at last, a band that's DIFFERENT from those Top-40 bands!

damn the music arrangement AND the vocal...they totally ROCK!!! 

hell yeah time to jump around again!!

this is an amazing song!!!!!!!!!! its like she is saying that you have to reach for what you want it wont just come to you and if you want to be free you can't rely on anything you need to do it you self but in all you need to be careful. it is basically a song about life.

"The truth never set me free, so I did it myself". I think this is a song about someone who was in a lot pain due to past experiences, and was "shut down", and was waiting for it to go away, but decided that she couldn't wait around anymore, she had to fix things herself.

Okay, so, THIS is the song off BNE. I found a song by Paramore, same name, and it is them, but it's a completely different song and I've tried looking for it everywhere to see what its really called, etc., and it's like it doesn't exist. It's tripping me out! I wanna know wtf I found, lol. Did this happen to anyone else?

DevorUs! Yes I was wondering the same thing!? On my I-pod I have 2 song entitled Careful. Both by paramore and according 2 my i-tunes both off the album brand new eyes. I can't find the other either. Only the 1 above. The other goes something like this..... 

I'm caught dancing with a lighter

I'm caught, your caught we're caught, dancing with a lighter?? Is that the 1 you got also?? Lol weird I'm confused haha

Paramore just Rocks plain and simple. Haley williams is a great artist she could put out I song that said almost anything and i'd listen 2 it haha but I'm sure glad she does sing songs with such conviction and great lyrics always. YOU GO GIRL| LOL

i think the song is about having a friend that refuses to accept christ... the begining verse is talking about how she used to think the exact same and think christ couldnt do anything for her. the second verse yalks about how she realiazed jesus is the truth and the only way, hence "Open your eyesLike I opened mine" and how it keeps saying "the truth never set me free ill do it myself" is the excuse her friend keeps giving her for not accepting jesus, and her old excuse too. and the chorus, "You can't be too careful anymore When all that is waiting for you Won't come any closer You've got to reach out a little more" is saying god has done everything to show her, and if she just reaches a little she can rceive all gods love.that what it means to me anyways...

I never saw it like this, just vaguely related to it for some reason...I've been battling an eating disorder myself and didn't realize why this song connected with me so much until I read this. Thank you...

Mmm. From the look of the lyrics (and I've not heard the music) it looks like the song will be all about the impact of the tune. Let's hope so. From the lyrics alone the song is about exactly what it says on the tin. For those of us who generally prefer early era Flans - as i do - the complaints lie in the "oh this will do" nature of the lyrics. I have long felt that this more pop throwaway style is Flans' deliberate or perhaps unconcious effort to write "hits". Initially this policy did bear fruit, working in a sense on Flood, when songs like Twisting had a great groove and clever lyrics. Since then its been much more hit and miss, the worst offenders in this misguided "hit" strategy being The Guitar; Drink; and the godawful Spy and It's Kickin' In. I miss the clever clever lyrics from the pre-Electra recordings. I'm hoping the tune kicks, as apart from the co-written "Damn Good Times" which was superb apart from its indulgent outro, most of Flans' contributions on the Spine were inferior to Linnell's lacking music (heavy emphasis on clever vocal effects) and decent lyrics. Worst still songs such as the aforementioned "It's Kickin' in" render the Giants ungiantlike and just MOR. If an album is a bag and the songs are items, the Giants may well want to pack more Linnell songs. Hopefully I will be proved wrong when I hear this song and Flans' tunes on "The Else". If so I will change my interpretation. (Mr Tuck) Having heard the song I loved it. I still think the lyrics are the least important bit of it though. 9af72c28ce

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