


"See You Again" was written by DJ Frank E, Charlie Puth, Wiz Khalifa, and Andrew Cedar. "See You Again" was the best selling-song of 2015 worldwide, with combined sales and track-equivalent streams of 20.9 million units according to IFPI. It was also shortlisted for the Song of the Year for the BBC Music Awards and was nominated for Best Original Song at the 73rd Golden Globe Awards. "See You Again" received three nominations at the 58th Annual Grammy Awards: Song of the Year, Best Pop Duo/Group Performance and Best Song Written for Visual Media. The music video was the most viewed video on YouTube from July 10 to August 4, 2017. It set the record for most streams in a single week worldwide, and in the United Kingdom also in a single week. The song held the record for the most-streamed track in a single day on Spotify in the United States, until it was surpassed by One Direction's " Drag Me Down". It also reached number one in several other countries including Australia, Austria, Canada, Germany, Ireland, New Zealand and Switzerland. It spent 12 non-consecutive weeks atop the US Billboard Hot 100, tying Eminem's " Lose Yourself" for the second longest-running rap number-one single in the country behind Lil Nas X & Billy Ray Cyrus' " Old Town Road", and topped the UK Singles Chart for two consecutive weeks. "See You Again" became both Khalifa's and Puth's biggest single to date. "See You Again" was released on March 10, 2015, as the soundtrack's lead single in the United States. The artists co-wrote the song with its co-producers, DJ Frank E and Andrew Cedar, with additional production from Puth and mixing provided by Manny Marroquin. Later on, the song was included as a bonus track on the international release of Puth's debut album, Nine Track Mind. It was commissioned for the soundtrack of the 2015 film Furious 7 as a tribute to actor Paul Walker, who died in a single-vehicle accident on November 30, 2013. " See You Again" is a song by American rapper Wiz Khalifa, featuring American singer Charlie Puth. This is pretty much background music, and it is fine as that so long beats slaps, cause other than that digging deeply in is where you find nothing much.Fast & Furious soundtrack singles chronology Wiz does not sound witty nor smooth nor creative and new over these instrumentals as others already mastering it. The mixtapes prior to this, in my opinion were somewhat enjoyable, fun and original to his sound, the trap/club project "Blacc Hollywood" may not be something already too familiar to Wiz' catalogue, sonically, and that is pretty much the lacking. The songcrafting is less joyful and more of a hashtag rap on "Blacc Hollywood". Wiz has shown that he is capable of making an album, but this time, the rhymes and songs are not memorable, just worn off, literally, as the word itself being thrown into this album. But the only replay-valued tracks really are the ones left of off the standard LP. "Promises" is him singing (kind of?), actually doing the better job here than his rapping, almost asking myself "why not more?" when most is rambling of rap-speak, sing-song-rapping with production instead at the end being the more attractive attraction. "House In The Hills" is wonderful compared to a handful, featuring some afro influenced production and introspective lyrics of his life- lifestyle and characteristics people like to jab on to him. And while Wiz probably wont (at this point) top the brilliance and cohesion of "Kush & Orange Juice", on the debut album the following singles, at least showed his charm and some catchy pop tunes. But even so, appearing on track nine of an album of thirteen it is not enough when the highlights comes up so late in. Though continuing from track "The Sleaze", it leaps higher than ever, serving some fresh and more ear-grabbing hooks and raps than to say. From themes to production, to Wiz struggle with bars, it varies as little as Kanye's interviews lately. Wiz Khalifa seems to be one of the most genuine in the industry, and the positive energy surrounding the music is loving, but the experience Wiz Khalifa seems to be one of the most genuine in the industry, and the positive energy surrounding the music is loving, but the experience itself is just plain boring and repetitive on "Blacc Hollywood".
