Is Fergie gonna crack the top 40? I was worried that I was too nice to her in my ratings but I didn't know ya'll would be so harsh.
I'm here for a Nicki in the 2010 rate situation where she looks down for the count but then Fergalicious flies past all of your fave songs into the top 20.
Is Fergie gonna crack the top 40? I was worried that I was too nice to her in my ratings but I didn't know ya'll would be so harsh.
I'm here for a Nicki in the 2010 rate situation where she looks down for the count but then Fergalicious flies past all of your fave songs into the top 20.
That would be nice. Fergalicious is legitimately better than all of Belinda, Wynonna, and Lauryn's songs.
Is Fergie gonna crack the top 40? I was worried that I was too nice to her in my ratings but I didn't know ya'll would be so harsh.
I'm here for a Nicki in the 2010 rate situation where she looks down for the count but then Fergalicious flies past all of your fave songs into the top 20.
Never count out the Fergalicious one. She's come back from serious drug problems; she can come back from this.
Following a gorgeously soulful performance on Idol Gives Back, Annie made her first appearance on the Billboard Hot 100 in 13 years with this cover of the classic Jimmy Cliff spiritual (ranked #317 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time). It was not a single, however—as far as I can tell, no official recording even exists—so it seems an appropriate choice for Annie's lowest-ranked track on this list.
Featuring a guest verse from Lauryn and an uncredited appearance by salsa legend Celia Cruz, this tale of a prostitute in Spanish Harlem is Wyclef Jean's reimagining of the Cuban standard. It's a pretty song, but it sort of languishes along without much excitement.