H.E.R. is a compilation album by American singer H.E.R., released on October 20, 2017, by RCA Records. The album comprises songs from the singer's EPs H.E.R., Vol. 1 (2016) and H.E.R., Vol. 2 (2017), and includes six additional songs. The album won Best R&B Album and received four other nominations at the 61st Grammy Awards, including Album of the Year and Best New Artist for H.E.R.[1]

The compilation H.E.R., released on October 20, 2017, includes the songs from the two prior EPs along with six new tracks, including the duet "Best Part" from Daniel Caesar's album Freudian (2017).[7] The six new songs were also released on a third EP, H.E.R., Vol. 2: The B-Sides, on October 20, 2017.[8] This EP peaked at number 139 on the Billboard 200.[6]


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It won the Album/Mixtape of the Year at the 2018 Soul Train Music Awards.[9] The album won Best R&B Album, as well as Best R&B Performance for the song "Best Part" with Daniel Caesar at the 61st Grammy Awards and also received a nomination for Album of the Year.

H.E.R. peaked at number 23 on the US Billboard 200 and number 14 on the US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart.[4][6] On January 16, 2020, the album was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for combined sales and album-equivalent units of over a million units in the United States.[10]

For the duration of the album, Drake fixates on the power women hold over him sexually and the power he has over them financially. This album is littered with lyrics about all the women who have deceived Drake and this album is a clap back at them.

Cher has been synonymous with glamour, invention and then re-invention for six decades and now she's once again trying something new: a Christmas album. The album combines quintessentially Cher twists on classics from the American holiday canon with new music more reminiscent of club bumping hits like "Believe" (which turned 25 this year).

As the opening act for everyone from the Ramones and Everclear to goth-rock favorite Peter Murphy, she won over concert audiences but was roundly ignored by record buyers. Radio programmers paid Jewel no mind, despite her two to three daily promotional visits to stations across the country while on the road. By the end of 1995, her debut album had sold barely 3,000 copies, the majority in San Diego.

Dolly Parton began each conversation with her "Rockstar" album collaborators by asking them for their help in a manner befitting her brand: She sent them love letters with her personal phone number included.

Sir Paul McCartney singing and playing piano on "Let It Be?" That's on the album. Sting being "impressed" by Parton's demo version of "Every Breath you Take?" That's on the album, too. Elton John and Creedence Clearwater Revival's John Fogerty performing "Don't Let The Sun Go Down On Me" and "Long As I Can See The Light?" Present, and accounted for.

"We were looking at each other and ad-libbing like we were on stage at a concert," she said. "The in-person moments recording this album felt like the old days -- the musicians singing in the studio, everyone feeling what we were performing and getting off on that live feeling."

"Being around someone who knows my career allowed me the ability to feel confident in trying challenging things I'd never tried -- like hitting notes higher and holding notes longer than I ever had," Parton said. "On this album, I finally achieved freedom as a singer that's comparable to what I've achieved as more of a song stylist and songwriter."

Collective Soul's 1993 classic "Shine" received the Parton cover treatment on her 2001-released album "Little Sparrow." That song received a Grammy for Best Country Female Vocal Performance for work by the legend described as "[catching] lightning in a jug" by Billboard Magazine.

"I wanted to make a record of major rock classics that reflected those songs, true to the rhythm, in my voice," she said. "I did my dead-level best to make an album I and the people whose songs I covered could be proud of -- and I think [what resulted] is some of my best work."

Parton releases New Harvest ... First Gathering, her first self-produced album. The single "Here You Come Again" hits number three on the pop charts. It holds the number one spot on the country charts for five straight weeks, making it the biggest hit (based on chart time) of her career.

New Harvest ... First Gathering goes platinum, making Parton the first female country artist to have an album sell one million copies. For the album Here You Come Again, Parton wins her first Grammy for Best Country Vocal Performance by a Female.

The song "9 to 5" reaches number one on the country and pop charts. It earns Parton Grammy Awards for Best Country Vocal Performance by a Female and Best Country Song. She releases the song on her own album, 9 to 5 and Odd Jobs, which wins Parton her first Academy of Country Music (ACM) Female Vocalist of the Year award.

The album Eagle When She Flies gives Parton another number one hit:"Rocking Years," with Ricky Van Shelton. Parton is Billboard's All-Time Top Female Country Artist, the only woman to chart number one records in three different decades.

Halos & Horns earns Parton two more Grammy nominations. She also earns a nomination for the CMA Female Vocalist Of The Year--her first such recognition in sixteen years. Sugar Hill releases the tribute album Just Because I'm A Woman: Songs of Dolly Parton. Welk Music Group releases a new collection of patriotic and spiritual songs by Parton, titled For God and Country. Two of her songs are named by CMT (Country Music Television) among the 100 Greatest Songs of Country Music.

Since 2021, Taylor Swift has been taking fans on a stroll down memory lane by re-releasing a so-called "Taylor's Version" of all of her past albums. The reason involves a contentious feud with a music manager, but it's more broadly about the singer's desire to have control over her catalog of songs.

The musician had been teasing new music for weeks, leading fans to believe something was in the works. (Was she inspired by her good friend Taylor Swift, queen of the easter eggs? Likely.) On June 26, she took to Twitter to share that her second album, called Guts, was coming soon; her previous album, Sour, was released in 2021.

On July 31, Rodrigo posted a mysterious teaser video to social media that involved her moving around a purple bedroom and going at it on a typewriter with a rock song playing in the background. 24 hours later on August 1, a little more than a month before the album's release, Rodrigo posted another video that revealed the entire Guts track list.

Becky said she planned to have a party with her family for the album release. But she's having the biggest party with her fans during the ongoing Mi Casa, Tu Casa Tour, her first headliner tour in the United States. It started in Boston and New York this month and continues with stops in the Southwest, including El Paso, Texas; San Diego and Los Angeles.

SUMMERS: I think the other thing that really shined through in this album for me is just so much queer joy and acceptance and love. Can you talk about that part of this album a little bit because it was a delight to listen to.

ZAHM: (Laughter) Oh, thanks. Gay, gay, gay - it was so gay. This whole year has been so gay. Oh, my goodness. My favorite part of the album is the way that I introduce the gay stuff, which is the "Oh Um" part.

Becky Isaacs, vocalist and guitar player for the bluegrass Southern gospel group The Isaacs talked about her life after a serious car crash in 2022 and her first solo album being nominated for a Grammy Award. 17dc91bb1f

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