It's Alright (Queen Latifah song)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/It's_Alright_(Queen_Latifah_song) an entity of type: Thing

"It's Alright" (1997) is a single by the American hip-hop artist and actress Queen Latifah, from her 1998 album, Order in the Court and the soundtrack to the 1997 film, Nothing to Lose. Similar to Latifah's 1994 song "Weekend Love" and subsequently, her 1998 song, "Paper", this was one of Latifah's singles to feature only her singing, with no rap vocals. The song is anchored by a sample of Alicia Myers' 1981 proto-disco hit "I Want To Thank You." The song originally appeared on the soundtrack to the film Nothing to Lose. The song was included on Latifah's 1998 album Order in the Court with slight changes. rdf:langString
rdf:langString It's Alright (Queen Latifah song)
rdf:langString It's Alright
rdf:langString It's Alright
xsd:integer 12240310
xsd:integer 1102420188
rdf:langString Order in the Court and Nothing to Lose (soundtrack)
rdf:langString QLItsAlright.jpg
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xsd:integer 1998
rdf:langString I Can't Understand
xsd:integer 1994
rdf:langString Darryl "Big Baby" McClary, "Suga" Mike Allen
xsd:integer 1997
xsd:date 1997-06-28
rdf:langString single
rdf:langString Darryl McClary, Faith Evans, Mike Allen, Kevin McCord, Kenny Whitehead
rdf:langString "It's Alright" (1997) is a single by the American hip-hop artist and actress Queen Latifah, from her 1998 album, Order in the Court and the soundtrack to the 1997 film, Nothing to Lose. Similar to Latifah's 1994 song "Weekend Love" and subsequently, her 1998 song, "Paper", this was one of Latifah's singles to feature only her singing, with no rap vocals. The song is anchored by a sample of Alicia Myers' 1981 proto-disco hit "I Want To Thank You." The song originally appeared on the soundtrack to the film Nothing to Lose. The song was included on Latifah's 1998 album Order in the Court with slight changes. The original version of "It's Alright" on the Nothing to Lose soundtrack features background vocals from Faith Evans, who co-wrote the song. However, the version of Latifah's album, Order in the Court, contains background vocals from the hip-hop artist Lil' Mo.
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xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2475
xsd:date 1997-06-28
xsd:double 211.0

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