Picked as the album's leading single and Norwood's first release with Epic Records following her departure from the Atlantic label in 2005, the song premiered on her official webpage on August 13, 2008. Her first release in four years, it was officially serviced to US radio on August 25, 2008, prior to receiving a major release between September 2008 and March 2009 on most international territories. While "Right Here (Departed)" became a moderate hit in the US, where it reached number 34 on the Billboard Hot 100, the track emerged as her highest-charting single in years, reaching the top ten of the French Singles Chart, top twenty on the Japan Hot 100, and the top of Billboard's Hot Dance Club Play chart.

In June 2004, Norwood's fourth studio album, Afrodisiac, was released on Atlantic Records. While the album became a critical success,[1] it enjoyed mediocre commercial success only: Though it debuted at number three on the Billboard 200, it generally failed to chart or sell noticeably outside the United States.[2] Lead single "Talk About Our Love", featuring rapper Kanye West, reached number six in the United Kingdom but later singles failed to score successfully on the popular music charts.[2] The following year, after eleven years with the company, Norwood asked for and received an unconditional release from Atlantic, citing her wish "to move on" as the main reason for her decision.[3] Completing her contract with the label, a compilation album compiling her first four studio albums with Atlantic, entitled The Best of Brandy, was released in March 2005. Thereupon, she reportedly started shopping for a new record deal under Knockout Entertainment, her brother's vanity label, and began work on her fifth studio album independently with a wider range of songwriters and producers.[4]


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Norwood noted the song "a Brandy song" and "reconnect" with Jerkins: "Our experience this time has been very magical," she said about collaboration with Jerkins. "Our sound is a little bit different from our old sound, [but] it's like something that we would have done but on another level. Like the new version of who we are [...]."[8] Lyrically, "Departed" chronicle a woman's talks about mutual support with loved ones.[8] Recorded with therapeutical background, Norwood has noted the fatal 2006 car accident, in which she was involved, as a reason for its inclusion on the album.[9] "To know that you have somebody by your side who is gonna always be there for you, that comforts you in a way and that kinda gives you an extra confidence about yourself," she said, "And that's what I love about it: It's first the message and then you get into the beat and the whole musical part of it. I think everyone's gonna be able to relate to that [...] It's universal."[6]

In Canada, "Right Here (Departed)" became Brandy's highest-charting single since 2002's "What About Us?". It debuted at number 95 on the Canadian Hot 100, dropped one week after and made a re-entry a month later on the chart, eventually rising to its peak position of number 39.[19] In Europe, the single reached number twenty-four on the Eurochart Hot 100 Singles chart and moreover made it to the top ten in France, where it became her best-selling effort in ten years, reaching a peak position of number seven based on digital downloads only.[19] It has since remained thirty-seven weeks within the top 100 of the chart.[20] In addition, "Right Here" scored top forty entries in Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Denmark, Germany, and Sweden, where it outsold any single release taken from previous album Afrodisiac (2004).[19]

i think this song is about a girl that has died.the older woman in this music video is supposed to be the mother of the girl that died. shes supposed to be sad and depressed. while she's in the parking lot the spirit of the daughter [brandy] comes to her and its like theyre saying goodbye.the man is supposed to be the boyfriend/husband and shes saying goodbye to him.basically shes saying goodbye to all the people she loved and cared for.

I love this song... I haven't ever really payed much attention to brandy, but this song really hit me when I heard it on the radio... it's a recurrent player on my ipod now. it really helps me feel a bit more hopeful when im feeling hopeless and trapped... gives me shivers.

In the chorus, Brandy emphasizes being there for the listener when their tears have dried and the world has turned silent. It suggests that even in moments of despair and a sense of isolation, there will always be someone there to support them. The repeated line "You'll be right here with me" reflects the belief that their connection will remain strong despite any struggles they encounter.

1) Almond milk is fine here, my vegan friends, as is oat milk, hazelnut milk, etc (though soy milk is trash). You can also replace, ooh, ~50ml of the milk with cream, if you want things a little richer.

I want you to put the brandy, syrup, milk and possibly vanilla in the shaker, now. Throw in just a single ice cube and \u2018whip shake\u2019 for 30 seconds or so - this will give you decent froth and not to much dilution. Now throw in a bunch of extra ice, give it another 3-second shake to cool it and strain through a tea-strainer into a pretty glass. Grate some fresh nutmeg over the top.

I am the journalist Richard Godwin and this is my cocktail newsletter. You will find instructions for making sugar syrup, grenadine, orgeat ice, etc here and my 10 RULES FOR MAKING COCKTAILS here. I have also assembled some bottle recommendations here - and here is the full archive of past cocktails. Scroll to the bottom of this page to find out what to get in for next week\u2019s special. 

MILK plus alcohol feels wrong somehow, two liquids that shouldn\u2019t really be running into each other like this. It\u2019s the adult world corrupting the infantile - the briefcase in the nursery; the exasperated parent slipping a little gin into their baby\u2019s bottle. Or maybe it\u2019s the infantile undermining the adult. Like when you reach for your revolver and pull out one of your kid\u2019s toy dinosaurs. We\u2019ve all been there.

The wrongness surely lies in milk\u2019s childish connotations. Milk is what we were weaned on (assuming we\u2019re all mammals here). Alcohol is what we\u2019re crawling to. \u201CCivilisation begins with distillation\u201D, said William Faulkner. And yet they\u2019re so delicious together. Also: a baby bottle makes a handy cocktail shaker if you\u2019re in a tight spot. Why, it has all the measurements written handily up the side! It cannot be a coincidence, either, that a standard scoop of milk powder requires 30ml water to dilute it. That\u2019s a shot.

Anyway, I always think there\u2019s something louche, something a little arrested development-y about drinking alcohol and milk in the same glass. It isn\u2019t exactly a grown-up thing for a person to drink. There\u2019s no more famous milk drinker than The Dude in the Coen brothers\u2019 cult comedy The Big Lebowski, who spends the whole movie drinking White Russians in his dressing gown. If he has become an international icon, it\u2019s not because of his whole-hearted embrace of adult responsibility. And then there\u2019s that famous story about John Lennon being introduced to Brandy Alexanders by Harry Nilsson at the Troubadour in Los Angeles. This was during his \u2018lost weekend\u2019, which lasted for most of 1974-75. \u201CAfter one he was everybody\u2019s friend,\u201D recalled one observer. \u201CAfter three he was nasty drunk.\u201D Lennon ended up being thrown out of the club. He tried to explain his behaviour a few months later on the Old Grey Whistle Test. \u201CIt was my first night on Brandy Alexanders. That\u2019s brandy and milk, folks!\u201D

Anyway. Pedants will note that the Brandy Alexander is not brandy and milk, but brandy, cream and cr\u00E8me de cacao (which just so happens to be the next ingredient I\u2019ll be covering in The Cabinet\u2026) Brandy and milk would be Milk Punch, the forefather of both the Alexander and the White Russian, which dates back to the 18th century at least.

One of these days, closer to Christmas perhaps, I\u2019m going to show you how to make a proper old fashioned Clarified Milk Punch, which is a whole other delicious thing altogether and takes a bit of effort. But Brandy Milk Punch is\u2026 well, it\u2019s brandy and milk, folks! It\u2019s easy to make and to drink.

It\u2019s a speciality of New Orleans, where it\u2019s usually served as a brunch drink. Certainly, it provides a little morning uplift, which is presumably why John Lee Hooker is prescribed it in the song Serves Me Right to Suffer (\u201CMy doctor put me on / Milk, cream and alcohol\u201D). However, to my mind it works better as a dessert drink, the sort of thing you\u2019ll have after dinner but then could find yourself drinking long into a night at the card tables. (Or in front of Succession). Traditionally, it\u2019s shaken and served with crushed ice but I happen to think water melting into milk isn\u2019t nice, so I prefer to serve it strained.

Public service announcement#1! 

There\u2019s a great Death & Co drink called The Ing\u00E9nue if you want something else to do with your cinnamon syrup: 60ml brandy, 30ml Italian vermouth, one teaspoon of cinnamon syrup, stirred and served up like a Manhattan. Contains no milk.

THIS PLAYLIST UPDATES AUTOMATICALLY EACH WEEK. The idea is, you download it and return to it each week in your Spotify. If there was an old song you\u2019d like to hear again, you\u2019ll find it RIGHT HERE in the ongoing archive of 2021 playlists.

At Sandstone Distillery, we hand-craft each batch of spirits from Washington-grown grains, carefully fermented and artfully distilled at just the right moment to bring the finest of the spirit to your bottle...spirits worthy of the Sandstone tradition! 17dc91bb1f

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