Chris Brown Wants To Get Nasty On New ‘summer Too Hot’ Single

Chris Brown Wants To Get Nasty On New 'summer Too Hot' Single

The summer will be “wet up” by Chris Brown thanks to his new song, “Summer Too Hot.”

The track, which will be released on June 23, will serve as the opening track for Breezy’s upcoming eleventh studio album. There aren’t many specifics yet about the album, but the famous singer has previously indicated there will be “just the right amount of magic to digest.”

He says, “I blew it all on her, I get it right back/She put it all on me, I couldn’t pipe that,” in the song. She loves it when I tug on it when it’s knotted back, but it’s difficult to get out of it because I tend to get distracted.

The album will come after June 2022’s Breezy LP, which received a Grammy nomination and included cameos from artists including Lil Wayne, Anderson.Paak, Lil Baby, EST Gee, Jack Harlow, Tory Lanez, Lil Durk, and others. With 72,000 album-equivalent units sold in its first week, it debuted at No. 4 on the Billboard 200.

Although CB11’s features have not yet been verified, Chris announced in April that he had been working on a “fire” new collaboration with the “Goodies” singer.

Although the announcement may excite fans, working with Breezy occasionally causes controversy. It’s unknown what the reaction will be to the news about Chlöe Bailey’s upcoming tune with CiCi given that their song together was treated with significant criticism.

Lil Dicky, on the other hand, is unremorseful about working with Chris Brown on the 2018 song “Freaky Friday.”

The Dave actor recently claimed he stands by his choice to collaborate with Chris, despite criticism, saying that the collaboration’s success allowed him to produce his 2019 charity single, “Earth.” Among the artists on the song were Kevin Hart, Wiz Khalifa, Snoop Dogg, and Justin Bieber.

“I cherish that tune. Even now, I adore the song. “I don’t know if I could have made [a charity single] like ‘Earth,’ where I raised, like, $3 million [to fight against climate change] without that song, which went to No. 1 in several countries,” he told THR.

The native Pennsylvanian said he does not take the criticism personally because he is aware that his heart is “good.”

I am aware of the goodness of my heart, he continued. I do, really. My heart doesn’t keep me up at night. You can never be flawless, and occasionally I’ll still be foolish and uninformed, but I genuinely care about doing morally.

“And listen, I understand why someone wouldn’t like a Lil Dicky song, but I’d never be okay with someone calling that guy an asshole or a piece of sh*t,” the rapper continued. As Dave Burd, the man, I’ve never had that experience, so for my art to elicit that response, my God, that truly saddens me.

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