El final me da escalofríos.
Beyoncé
ESPECTACULAR!
Impresionante actuación!!!
Wow!!!
Que deje a Jay Z y se vaya con Kendrick!
A mi Beyonce ni fu ni fa,pero esta actuacion se la ha currado y esta muy lograda.Ademas la cancion tambien mola.
No recordaba lo temazo que es "Say my name" de las Destiny's
[borrado]
6 inch es como lo mejor que ha hecho esta mujer, no? La veo como el Haunted de Lemonade.
Ambas son de Boots.
A mí las que más me han acabado gustando de Lemonade son las tres últimas. All Night es preciosa.
Al final se arreglaron?? A mi BOOTS en general me gusta, pero cuando va por libre se le va un poqui de las manos...
Acabo de oírla por millonésima vez, 6 inch, y estoy con la piel encogida. Qué buena es.
A mi me pone cerdo.
She too smart to crave material things... â¥
Yo siempre me la quito despues de Sorry, me da mucho coraje lo que me recuerda al tema de Hooverphonic que sampleaba lo mismo. Eso sí, el momento COME BACK es brutal.
Yo igual que sebas, el estribllo me encanta y el final es alucinante, pero ni soporto a The Weeknd ni me gustan los versos
- Editado
Beyoncé debe haberles echado la maldición a todas las ex-Destiny's, después de lo de Farrah, esto: LaTavia Roberson âFighting For Her Lifeâ After Pregnancy Complications
Mike WiLL Made-It habla largo y tendido sobre la grabación de Formation: http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2016/07/11/how-mike-will-made-it The seed that became Beyoncéâs âFormationâ was planted by Swae Lee, one of the Rae Sremmurd duo, and A Pluss, one of Ear Drummerâs staff producers, who has been a friend of Willâs since high school. A Pluss had started the beat back in Atlanta, and Will had it with him on his phone when he was driving from L.A. to the Coachella music festival with Lee and his brother, in 2014. âSo weâre in the middle of the desert,â Will explained. âAnd weâre just coming upâwe just freestyle, you know?âand Swae Lee said, âO.K., ladies, now letâs get in formation.â And we put it on the VoiceNote. Swae Leeâs got so many voice notes that he doesnât even record, but Iâm like, âDog, we got to do that âget in formationâ shit.â That could be a hard song for the ladies. Some woman-empowerment shit. Like, âLadies, letâs get in line, letâs not just fall for anything.â Iâm seeing that vision.â When they got back from Coachella, they booked a studio, and Swae Lee âended up just laying it down.â The year before, Will had hoped that he might get to work with Beyoncé. Heâd been summoned to New York by Jon Platt, of Warner/Chappell, to work on the track âBeach Is Better,â for Jay Zâs album âMagna Carta . . . Holy Grail.â The collaboration with Jay Z went well, but nothing panned out with his wife. Now Will sent the song, along with five or six others, to Beyoncé and her team. Platt, their mutual publisher, made sure she listened. A few months after this, Will was in L.A., where he attended a Clippers-Cavaliers basketball game. He knew LeBron Jamesâs agent, Rich Paul, because heâd produced the John Legend song âMy Shoes,â which was in the memorable 2013 Nike commercial that showed LeBron running through the streets of Miami. They were staying in the same hotel, and Paul invited Will to join LeBron and his friends after the game. But Will fell asleep in his room. âI woke up at two in the morning,â he said. âAnd I had some missed calls, and I called Rich back and I was like, âMy bad, bro, youâre probably in the room by now,â and he was like, âNo, weâre still down here.â So I went down there, and I was chopping it up with LeBron and the Cavaliers, and then Jay Z and Beyoncé just walked up. And this was really like a dream to me. I was just asleep upstairs and now Iâm kicking it with Jay Z, Beyoncé, and LeBron. And Bey was like, âYo, I like that âformationâ idea.â And I told her what I was thinking about the woman empowerment, and she was like, âYeah I kinda like that idea.â And she just left it like that. âWe were just thinking about it being a female anthem,â Will went on. âBecause I knew I just wanted a banger with Beyoncé, like a âSingle Ladies,â but I wanted it to be a new kind of chant.â Back in New York, Beyoncé wrote verses for the song, but kept the central concept of âget in formation.â The song broadened to become both a Black Lives Matter power anthem and an intimate song about her family. âNext thing I know,â Will continued, âBig JonââJon Plattââtold me, âYo, this shitâs crazy, you got to hear this.â â Will went to New York and spent a week with Beyoncé in the studio recording the song. Beyoncé, he explained, âtook this one little idea we came up with on the way to Coachella, put it in a pot, stirred it up, and came with this smash. She takes ideas and puts them with her own ideas, and makes this masterpiece. Sheâs all about collaborating.â He added, âThatâs what makes her Beyoncé. Being able to know what she wants. A lot of people donât know what they want. To the point where you can bring them some hot shit, and theyâre like, âThis shit ainât it. I need a hit, bro.â And Iâm like, âMan, this is a hit. If you donât like this line or that line, you should take this line out and put your own lines in there, and we doctor it up.â Some people want it cooked. They just want to put a little icing on it and bite it. But itâs really a process to make one of these great songs. Itâs layers. Layers and layers and layers.â
Este artículo amplia aún más la info: http://uproxx.com/music/mike-will-made-it-making-beyonce-formation/