Glamorous is a song recorded by American singer and rapper Fergie for her debut studio album, The Dutchess. The song features vocals from American rapper Ludacris. It was released as the third single from The Dutchess worldwide except for in the United Kingdom, where it served as the second single. It was written by Fergie, Ludacris, will. The lyrics deal with the protagonist staying rooted despite her success and fame.
The song achieved commercial success worldwide, peaking inside the top ten in several countries, including Australia, the Republic of Ireland and the United Kingdom. The song also became her third best selling song in the United States, amassing sales of over three million copies as of August , and earning a double platinum certification by the Recording Industry Association of America RIAA.
The music video for "Glamorous" features Fergie in scenes in which she portrays a successful actress and a teenager, acting as flashbacks from her past.
The production and drum programming was helmed by Jones under his stage-name Polow da Don. Adams, under his stage-name will. The song features co-writer Williams, who provided the keys, and Mike Hartnett, who played the guitars. The technical work performed on "Glamorous" includes engineering, which was orchestrated principally by Travis Daniels and was assisted by Mack Woodward.
Tal Herzberg, who has worked the Black Eyed Peas on previous studio recordings, performed additional engineering on the track with the use of Pro Tools. It was later released as a single around the world on March 16, as a CD single.
According to Dan Gennoe of Yahoo! Music, the song is comparable to the music of Janet Jackson. Spence D. According to the digital music sheet published at Musicnotes. Having a beat measure of beats per minute, it is set in common time and moves through a moderately fast tempo. The vocals range from a low register of E 3 to a high register of C 5. It has a basic sequence of G-Am7-Fmaj7 as its chord progression. Lyrically, "Glamorous" is an autobiographical account about how Fergie has remained true to her background, despite widespread fame and mainstream success.
Bill Lamb of About. Lamb also noted that "The frequent sparks of self-referential humor present in much of Fergies music are missing here which limits the distinctiveness of this song" and said it "veers a bit uncomfortably close" to Gwen Stefanis single "Luxurious" Love. The album as a whole is solid, accomplishing what it set out to and reacquainting the public with its duchess through a series of really good songs that may happen to coexist with a few duds.
Skip to content Toggle navigation. Sounds x October 11, I agree to my Facebook data being stored and used as per Privacy Policy. We flyin' first class up in the sky We flyin' first class, livin' the life In the fast lane and I won't change By the glamorous, ooh, the flossy, flossy.
The glamorous, the glamorous, glamorous By the glamorous, ooh, the flossy, flossy The glamorous, the glamorous, glamorous By the glamorous, ooh the flossy, flossy. Wear them gold and diamonds rings, all them things don't mean a thing Chaperons and limousines, shoppin' for expensive things I be on the movie screens, magazines and boogie scenes I'm not clean, I'm not pristine, I'm no queen, I'm no machine.
First class up in the sky Flyin' first class, livin' my life In the fast lane and I won't change By the glamorous, ooh, the flossy, flossy.
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