Probz hit "Waves," the most popular EDM has turned down. With OMI's "Cheerleader," Major Lazer and DJ Snake's "Lean On," and last year's Robin Schulz/Mr.
is at the Laugh Factory.Īfter a soft-release R&B "compilation" album-the main difference between it and a "real album" is that it wasn't heavily promoted nor were its numbers released by Billboard-Bieber took a few PR hits (probably-I've mostly tuned them out, but I think there was something to do with South American hookers?) before roaring back on the surprisingly solid Skrillex/Diplo collab "Where Are U Now." The song was a major success, due in large part to its producer's prescience. It's also kind of funny that Dolph's only real stop in L.A. Although I couldn't ID the sample, it does feel like the spiritual son of Leon Ware's "That Is Why I Came to California." Hard to say what this song will mean for the future of Colonel Loud, but it's a definite winner for anybody's party playlist. Hanky-produced beat draws a connection between new Cali and the sparse sound of 1980s funk and R&B. Perhaps the concept was inspired by the song's thick groove, which seems closer to Mustard's ratchet sound than a traditional North Carolina hit much like the Migos' "Fight Night," an outsider's version of the West's production style finds new wrinkles in a familiar formula. Raleigh, N.C., rapper Colonel Loud (.that name!) has scored a major record with "California," a song that channels old school R&B and up-and-coming Southern nightclub circuit rapper Young Dolph for a feel-good summer jam salute to the left coast. Colonel Loud f/ Young Dolph and Ricco Barrino "California"