Remix by French Montana featuring Swae Lee and Mariah CareyĪ version featuring Swae Lee with an additional verse by Slim Jxmmi, the other member of Rae Sremmurd, was released on May 26, 2017. Remixes and cover versions "Unforgettable (remix)" As of January 2021, the video has over 1.1 billion views on YouTube.
It was directed by French Montana and Spiff TV and includes Ugandan young dance group known as the Triplets Ghetto Kids. The song's accompanying music video premiered on April 13, 2017, on French Montana's Vevo account on YouTube. According to the sheet music published at, the song is written in the key of G♯ minor with a tempo of 98 beats per minute. "Unforgettable" is a dancehall and hip hop song. The song has been certified Diamond and Multi Platinum in over sixteen countries and 9x Platinum in the US alone by the Recording Industry Association of America. The song was later re-mixed and mastered and was released as an official single on April 7, 2017, alongside "No Pressure" featuring Future. "Unforgettable" has reached the top 10 in 15 countries including Australia, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Ireland, Netherlands, New Zealand, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom, and the top 20 in Austria, Czech Republic, Hungary, Lebanon, Norway, Scotland, and Spain.įrench Montana leaked the song in November 2016 which featured Swae Lee and added Jeremih. The official music video for "Unforgettable" has received over 1.3 billion views on YouTube.
Produced by Jaegen, 1Mind, C.P Dubb, and Mike Will Made It, the song peaked at number 3 on the US Billboard Hot 100, making it French Montana's first song as a lead artist to reach the top 10 of that chart and Swae Lee's first as a solo artist. It was released through Epic Records and Bad Boy Records on April 7, 2017, as one of the lead singles from his second studio album Jungle Rules, along with "No Pressure". Jeremih nonetheless delivers enough slightly quavering, somewhat vulnerable sounding NC-17 and X-rated lines to keep ears perked." Unforgettable" is a song by Moroccan American rapper French Montana featuring the hip-hop duo Rae Sremmurd's Swae Lee. Somewhat surprisingly, Mick Schultz, who was involved in the entirety of the first two albums, is credited as co-composer of only three cuts here - including "Don't Tell 'Em" - and the succession of guest artists is so long that it becomes disruptive. Even if he sang lines like "When you put that ass on my face, feel like I'm 'bout to drown" in his falsetto with maximum conviction, there would be no mistaking him for Philip Bailey. It's apparently truer to Jeremih's vision than his first two albums, though only the most attentive listening reveals an artist with more dimensions - or more vocal ability - than the one who sang "Birthday Sex" and "Down on Me." His approach remains mostly about sly and stoned hooks, and the subject matter largely sticks to getting laid and high, typically in explicit and uninventive form, with only small traces of the "church feeling" he has said he can supply. Despite the winding path that led to it, Late Nights is together, neither tentative nor overcooked. As late as three days prior to its release, there was no mention of it on any of Jeremih's social media accounts, which were seemingly misaligned, their header images pushing different singles. And then, in December 2015, Late Nights: The Album suddenly appeared. All the while, Jeremih disowned his earlier smashes, and elusive album three was repeatedly delayed. In 2014, "Don't Tell 'Em" - a bleeping, Snap!-interpolating collaboration with DJ Mustard - went double platinum without a video to promote it, and it was followed in 2015 by the spacious, salacious "Planes," another platinum hit.
Late Nights with Jeremih and a collaborative EP with Shlohmo, released as free downloads, went over well. He accessorized Top Ten R&B/Hip-Hop singles headlined by Wale, Meek Mill, DJ Khaled, and Natalie La Rose.
Jeremih wasn't inactive between his second and third proper albums. The great magnitude of Jeremih's extracurricular successes, combined with slips the singer pinned on himself and his label, made the five-year separation between All About You and Late Nights: The Album an odd one.