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‘GREAT F–KIN’ IDEA!’: How Florida Georgia Line & Nelly’s ‘Cruise’ Teamup Made (Controversial) History

10 years ago, the team-up reinvigorated a hit and broke genre barriers and chart records, pointing the way to both the "bro-country" takeover and to historical imbalances still lingering in country.

By Natalie Weiner

Natalie Weiner

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Florida Georgia Line and Nelly

It started, as you might expect, with a truck. 

“There were two dudes — I’m not joking — sitting on the tailgate of a truck across from my house,” Jesse Rice recalls of the first time he met Brian Kelley and Tyler Hubbard, the singer-songwriters who would become Florida Georgia Line . It turned out they were his neighbors in a townhouse complex near Vanderbilt, and the duo had heard through the grapevine that Rice was a songwriter too. “We have a little duo, and we’re trying to get into country music,” the pair, still then students at Belmont University, told him. “We wanted to see if you’d like to write some time.”

Florida Georgia Line’s ‘Cruise’ Reaches RIAA Diamond Status

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“I knew it was special,” Jesse Rice recalls of the day they wrote “ Cruise .” “But I didn’t think it was going to change country music.”

The song-about-a-song is a straightforward-sounding, meticulously-constructed earworm that hinges on the most appealing and specific version of the now-ubiquitous masculine country checklist (lusty descriptions of women, backroads, trucks). It turned out to be something of a “generational gauntlet,” as critic Jody Rosen puts it — particularly in the form of its blockbuster Nelly-featuring remix, released 10 years ago this week. Its massive success colored much of what came after its 24 record-breaking weeks atop the Hot Country Songs chart, whether that was songs trying to imitate it or the tidal wave of critical backlash.

“It definitively announced that this marriage of hip hop and country was happening ,” Rosen says. “In commercial terms, in cultural terms, it’s got to be one of the 10 most important songs of the decade, of the past 20 years — whatever you got.”

“Cruise” and its pop experimentation paved the way for the vast majority of contemporary country music, in large part because of the way it seamlessly drew from an influence that, in previous iterations, mostly been cringeworthy: hip-hop. That innovation opened up Nashville’s sonic landscape in a way that’s still felt today – though it also tied it into a long history of one-way relationships between Black art and country music, which hasn’t necessarily gotten a lot more balanced in the years since. 

“I used to freestyle over it, so I just sort of started freestyling that first verse,” Jesse Rice recalls. “We were kind of like, ‘Whoa, what’s that? That sounds really freakin’ cool.'” 45 minutes later, the initial version of “Cruise” was committed to tape — and they went back to working on “Rain.”

Initially Jesse Rice was the one performing “Cruise” when the four of them went on an early tour of college towns in the Southeast. But when Kelley came up and harmonized with him during a soundcheck in Starkville, Mississippi, it became apparent that it needed to be a Florida Georgia Line song. Kelley and Hubbard performed it together for the first time in Tuscaloosa. “It sounded amazing,” Jesse says. “I was like, ‘Well, that’s a no-brainer. You guys are gonna do that one for the rest of the tour.’”

Kelley and Hubbard took the song to then-rising producer Joey Moi for one of their very first recording sessions. Moi had “discovered” them at a county fair before signing them to a publishing deal with the company now known simply as Big Loud. “We were very, very green in the studio,” Hubbard remembers. “Everything about it was a learning experience.”

“The very first time we worked in the studio together, it was partially about breaking them of the mentality that going in to record the song doesn’t mean it’s done,” says Moi. “Let’s dig back into these lyrics and make this better.” So they tinkered, “tightening the screws” on the lyrics, as Kelley describes it, for a few hours — distilling the song’s core idea into a pop monolith.

Moi has been in it long enough that radio formats are effectively his first language: “FGL incorporated a lot more rhythmic elements and active rock,” he explains. “We got to this neat, rock-hybrid, very live-venue-friendly, high-energy type of place.” 

But according to Moi and the other “Cruise” co-writers, the song just proved to be the perfect exemplar of the simmering shift already taking place around Nashville; Moi’s first big Nashville production, Jake Owen’s Barefoot Blue Jean Night , had been something of an opening salvo, while Jason Aldean’s “Dirt Road Anthem” (2010) put hip-hop influences front and center (and later featured a Ludacris remix). “Cruise” would eventually take the top spot on the Hot Country Songs chart from Taylor Swift’s “We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together,” another take on Millennial-friendly country-pop crossover.

When Kelley and Hubbard stepped out of the studio, though, they weren’t thinking about any of that. “I mean, we couldn’t stop playing it ourselves,” Kelley recalls. “It felt so different and new, but it also felt like us. We felt like we were just onto something.”

They released the song, their very first single, to iTunes in April 2012. “I was like, ‘Damn, first single by a band that nobody knows? Nobody’s gonna hear this,'” says Chase Rice, who had thought the song might have a shot with a bigger act, like Luke Bryan. “Damn, was I wrong.”

He didn’t become that guy, signing FGL to Republic Nashville (a joint venture between Big Machine and Republic Records) in July 2012. Though there were some conversations inside the label about whether the satellite success of “Cruise” would translate over the terrestrial airwaves, and even whether they should send “Tip It Back” — a slightly more familiar-sounding song off the duo’s second EP — to radio first. Instead, they decided to move ahead with “Cruise,” and it made its way up the country charts. 

As it reached its first country chart peak (and a No. 16 peak on the Billboard Hot 100 ) in December of 2012, Republic Nashville started floating the idea of sending the song to pop radio — a decision that was still somewhat radical in the self-isolating world of commercial country music. “We wanted to solidify ourselves in Nashville and country radio,” Moi told Billboard of considering a pop push in 2013. “We were very hesitant. It was just kind of a scary thought, of trying to cross over.” 

Still, Republic sent the record to producer Jason Nevins, who had achieved overseas success with a number of house-driven hip-hop remixes in the late ’90s and early ’00s, with the idea of creating a club-ready option for “Cruise” — something similar to the promotional “ mixshow edit ” he’d done for FGL’s Republic Nashville labelmates The Band Perry the year prior.

That idea was simple: Nelly . 12 years after Country Grammar and “Ride Wit Me,” the melodic MC could join yet another breezy, summertime, driving-with-the-windows-down song — one penned by a few guys who had realistically been as influenced by the St. Louis rapper’s music as they had by any of their Nashville forebears. (FGL and Nelly would eventually perform the songs back to back at the American Music Awards .) It had been several years since the rapper had a bona fide smash, and his country resume — duetting with Tim McGraw on 2004’s “Over And Over” — was just a bonus.

Nevins still has the email that Republic CEO Monte Lipman wrote back. It was three words, in big red letters: “GREAT F–KIN’ IDEA!” “Monte never writes emails to me like that,” Nevins says. “So I knew I was onto something.” Nelly was on Republic Records at the time, so there were no administrative hurdles. 

The producer stripped “Cruise” down to the studs, omitting all the banjo and dobro that had made it fit in on country radio and rebuilding it around a less genre-specific and very Top 40-friendly sound. “That was the one area where we were skeptical,” says Moi. “We were like, ‘It’s really country — it’s going to take a lot to really land it in that space.'”

Very little of the original — besides the song itself — survived the transformation: twangy Telecaster riffs turned into new, hyper-processed vocal lines courtesy of Hubbard and Kelley, and acoustic guitar was pushed into the background to showcase the wall of harmonies. 

The result was singular. A smiling country song with veneers, it combined the rabid, over-the-top party spirit of the EDM era with an enviably carefree, breezy backroads affect. Nelly’s verse, in which he rehashes the chorus with characteristic panache, is the cherry on top — the ultimate nostalgic, full-circle moment for an artist whose professional debut centered on touting his country bona fides.

Needless to say, the remix worked. Released to iTunes on April 2, 2013, it was downloaded 186,000 times its first week, immediately returning the song to the Hot 100 at No. 8 and sending it to its sixth week atop Hot Country Songs. The song was already double platinum; it would go platinum six times over by the end of 2013, and spend 24 total weeks atop Hot Country Songs — the longest run in that chart’s history, until Sam Hunt’s “Body Like a Back Road” toppled the record in 2017. (FGL would almost immediately reclaim the title in 2018 with their Bebe Rehxa collaboration “Meant To Be,” and have held it since.) 

The remix peaked at No. 4 on the Hot 100, with the song spending 54 weeks total on the chart; it reached the top 10 on the Adult and Mainstream Top 40 charts as well, cementing its crossover appeal. Overall, the song is platinum 14 times over — diamond and then some — as of last October. All Billboard chart metrics and RIAA certifications combine the numbers for the original version with the remix, so it’s hard to know which record ultimately proved to be the most popular. But there’s no question that it was the remix that sparked “Cruise” to ubiquity — to the impossible-to-ignore success that made the song the line between one era of country music and another.

Of course, it sparked legions of imitators, most immediately a somewhat halfhearted remix of FGL’s own Luke Bryan collaboration “This Is How We Roll” with Jason Derulo (which reached Top 40 and was quite successful, albeit nowhere near the scale of “Cruise”). Rosen wrote a piece for New York Magazine about it that had nearly as much of an impact on country music as the song itself: “ On the Rise of Bro-Country ,” which coined the term that’s been bandied about ever since, most often as an indictment of the most superficial and laziest tendencies of country music’s commercially driven side. 

The term became incredibly popular, mostly for use as a cudgel against the trend that FGL had crystallized with “Cruise.” “If I’m being honest, that s–t really drives me bananas,” says Jesse Rice. “You want to call ‘Cruise’ bro-country? ‘Cruise’ is a very complex song … not all of [that kind of music] is good, and maybe most of it wasn’t good, but I think it demeans some of it that was really good. Especially when you’re hearing it from people you’re working with in Nashville.”

“Bro-country” became inescapable as an idea, though, partly due to the lack of a better term for the sea change happening in the music. “Even at the time, you could recognize that there was some kind of changing of the guard going,” Rosen says now, echoing sentiments he predicted back in his 2013 piece. “That assessment still feels right in retrospect.”

It was, indeed, a turning point, on a scale even larger than Rosen had foreseen. “Cruise” emerged at the dawn of the streaming age, when genreless consumption — already a dominant mode — was on the cusp of taking over. The unbothered blending of country, rock and hip-hop influences that became Florida Georgia Line’s specialty would reshape country’s commercial sound completely, to the chagrin of both traditionalists and outsiders — and expand its reach exponentially.

“Whether you like what happened after that or you hate it, it took country music to a whole other level,” says Chase Rice. “For better or worse, it’s just never going away.”

It also took almost everyone involved to a whole other level, including Chase, who became a solo hitmaker in his own right; Moi, who became one of the genre’s most sought-after producers; Big Loud as an entreprise, and of course FGL as an act, with its 16 Country Airplay No. 1s and the genre’s first diamond-certified song. “Culturally and creatively, it just felt like the format was ready for a little bit more of a progressive sound,” adds Moi. “We just happened to land at the exact right time.”

“In the post-‘Cruise’ era, it feels like production is really important in country in a way maybe it hadn’t been,” Rosen says now. “The beats came in, hip-hop entered the picture. That is a marker now of all these acts, whether they’re really, truly conversant in hip-hop, or they just have a certain kind of rhythm in their sound.”

In other words, country evolved for a new generation and a wider audience in the same way it always has — on the back of Black art and artists. The biggest achievement of “Cruise,” in that light, is that it actually made a Black artist inextricable from a country hit that drew from Black music; that there was some degree of payoff to its casual appropriation. That piece of its success was, notably, not imitated. Black artists have faced as many barriers to contributing to Nashville’s music industry as they ever have over the past decade: for every artist like Kane Brown, Breland, Jimmie Allen and Mickey Guyton who’s made inroads at country radio and on the charts, there’s been something to remind those artists of their otherness or make them feel like outsiders .

An oft-retold story among those who helped shape “Cruise” comes down to its most memorable hook, which also happens to be its opening line: “Baby you a song, you make me wanna roll my windows down, and cruuuuuuise.” Kelley, Chase Rice and Jesse Rice had originally written the line as, “Baby you’re like a song…”, and performed it that way for a while before Kelley and Hubbard elected to take it to Moi as a potential addition to their second EP. 

These kinds of happy-for-executives coincidences typically get explained away with ease. “They grew up listening to hip-hop as well as country,” Scott Borchetta, founder of the Big Machine Label Group, explained to the Washington Post in 2013 of the growing number of country artists incorporating hip-hop in their music. “It’s coming out in their music because it’s in their DNA.”

It certainly makes sense that hip-hop influences felt as intuitive for FGL-generation country artists as for any others who have come of age since hip-hop became mainstream pop. Watching Nelly perform alongside the duo, though, is a stark reminder of how in that exchange of ideas, the money tends to only flow one way; that while it might feel like hip-hop is “in [FGL’s] DNA,” it’s not. The intervening years have brought more efforts by both FGL and Nelly (among a number of other well-intentioned and like-minded artists) to correct that inequity. But “Baby you a song” isn’t just like Country Grammar — it is country grammar, a grammar that is as influential in country music today as ever. 

The push and pull between progressive-minded inclusion and the genre-agnostic artistry it can create, and appropriation — from barely perceptible to egregious and everything in between — lives within “Cruise” and its legacy. The song’s victory, though, was the integration of a Black hip-hop artist into a huge hit that anyone asked would call country, and the destruction, however temporarily, of the fundamental, racist genre divide that has defined American recorded music from the start.

That brought them their other win: an addictive, electric pop song whose reach and inventiveness has not yet been exactly replicated, despite seemingly all of Nashville’s best efforts. “We’re looking for the next ‘Cruise’,” Jesse Rice remembers hearing in the aftermath, as labels banged down his door. “No s–t’, you’re looking for the next ‘Cruise,'” he says. “You and everybody .”

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  • Florida Georgia Line & Nelly Lyrics
  • 100x zomer 2014 Album
  • Cruise Lyrics

Florida Georgia Line & Nelly - Cruise Lyrics

Artist: Florida Georgia Line & Nelly

Album: 100x zomer 2014

cruise nelly and florida georgia line

Baby you a song You make me wanna roll my windows down and cruise I got my windows down, and the radio up, get your radio up I got my windows down, and the radio up, get your radio up Yeah when I first saw that bikini top on her She's poppin' right out of the South Georgia water Thought ol' good Lord, she had them long tanned legs Couldn't help myself so I walked up and said Baby you a song You make me wanna roll my windows down and cruise Down a back road blowin' stop signs through the middle Every little farm town with you And this brand new Chevy with a lift kit Would look a hell lot better with you up in it So baby you a song You make me wanna roll my windows down and cruise I got my windows down, and the radio up, get your radio up She was sippin' on Southern and singin' Marshall Tucker We were falling in love in the sweet heart of summer She hopped right up into the cab of my truck And said, " Fire it up! Let's go get this thing stuck!" Baby you a song You make me wanna roll my windows down and cruise Down a back road blowin' stop signs through the middle Every little farm town with you And this brand new Chevy with a lift kit Would look a hell lot better with you up in it So baby you a song You make me wanna roll my windows down and cruise My windows down, my seats are back My music up and we ride Her legs up on my dashboard And that's just the way I like Hey country girl, this country boy Like everything about you Don't change a thing, no way You stay the same and I got you I like saw that, all that Head to toe you all that Tell em boy he call back Send a text, say " phone back" cause I can see you got a thing for the fast life So come on, shawty, let me show you what the fast like Whipping 'cross the border, Florida into Georgia Cause baby you a song You make me wanna roll my windows down and cruise Down a back road blowin' stop signs through the middle Every hood, every town with you And this drop-top Chevy painted real slick Would look a hell a lot better with you up in it Cause baby you a song And you make me wanna roll my, roll my... Baby you a song You make me wanna roll my windows down and cruise Down a back road blowin' stop signs through the middle Every little farm town with you And this brand new Chevy with a lift kit Would look a hell lot better with you up in it Come on! Baby you a song You make me wanna roll my windows down and cruise I got my windows down, and the radio up, get your radio up I got my windows down, and the radio up, get your radio up I got my windows down, and the radio up, get your radio up

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Cruise by Florida Georgia Line

cruise nelly and florida georgia line

Songfacts®:

  • Georgia born and raised Tyler Hubbard and Florida native Brian Kelley both began playing guitar individually while they were in high school before meeting at Nashville's Belmont University. They began writing songs together between classes and soon found themselves playing local clubs, quickly building a fanbase. Hubbard and Kelley signed a publishing/production/management deal with Craig Wiseman's Big Loud Mountain record label in December 2011 and released their first five-song EP, It'z Just What We Do the following May. This breezy summer song is their first single from the collection.
  • The song's success was predicted by Brian Kelley as soon as the pair started laying it down. "I remember first day in the studio when we were recording 'Cruise' and it was starting to come to life," said Tyler as the song climbed the Hot 100. "BK looked at me and he said, 'Dude, we're gonna sell a million copies of this song.' And I'm like, 'Dude, there's no way. It's not even possible.' And you know, that was a year ago when we were starting to work on it."
  • When this tale of youthful attraction, music and Georgia back roads topped Billboard's Country Airplay chart, Florida Georgia Line became the first duo or group to reach #1 on the chart with a debut single since Zac Brown Band's " Chicken Fried " in December 2008.
  • The song left the Hot 100 in February 2013, after peaking at #16. However, after a pop crossover remix with rapper Nelly was released a couple of months later, the song reappeared on the chart this time in the Top 10.
  • This song found a home on pop radio playlists alongside far more kinetic fare by the likes of Icona Pop, Robin Thicke, and Maroon 5. Part of its appeal is its unabashedly Southern sentiments, as we hear about a beautiful girl who enjoys both The Marshall Tucker Band (" Can't You See ," " Heard It In A Love Song ") and Southern Comfort cocktails. Unlike most hits of the time, the song forgoes an intro and starts right in with the chorus, which is repeated three more times in the song. In the last verse, most of the musical backing is dropped, which adds provides a nice break near the end of the song and adds impact to that fourth chorus.
  • Brian Kelley of Florida Georgia Line explained to Radio.com how the collaboration with Nelly came together. "We had some pop stations that were wanting a different version of 'Cruise' that we could send out, and he [Nelly] is a labelmate," he said. "We heard he was a fan of what we were doing and the song. We knew he wanted to do it, and literally a day or two later we had the track and we cranked it up on the bus." He added that the pair were blown away by Nelly's version. "I literally think that whole weekend we probably listened to it a couple hundred times," he admitted. "We're huge fans of him. I don't think we could have picked anybody better. It fits what we're doing, it fits what he's doing. He's a country boy at heart. We're thankful that he put his amazing talent on our song." This wasn't the first time that Nelly had dipped his toe into the Nashville sound. In 2004 he recorded a country-rap hybrid, " Over and Over ," with Tim McGraw, which peaked at #3 on the Hot 100.
  • The song set the all-time record for the most weeks at #1 on the Hot Country Songs chart (over three different runs). It overtook three other titles that each led for 21 weeks - Eddy Arnold's "I'll Hold You in My Heart (1947-48), Hank Snow's "I'm Moving On" (1950-51) and Webb Pierce's "In the Jailhouse Now" (1955). The song finally abdicated the #1 crown after a run of 24 cumulative weeks, the last 19 occurring over consecutive frames. The record was eclipsed by Sam Hunt's smash single " Body Like a Back Road ," which spent its unprecedented 25th consecutive week atop the country chart on the tally dated August 12, 2017.
  • The song climbed into the Hot 100's top five in its 34th week on the chart, setting a record for the slowest ascent to the region in the chart's history. It eclipsed the 30-week ascent to the top five of Lonestar's " Amazed " in 1999-2000. Imagine Dragons bested Florida Georgia Line's longevity record just three weeks later when " Radioactive " climbed into the Hot 100's top five for the first time in its 42nd week on the chart.
  • This was the first song that Florida Georgia Line wrote with producer Joey Moi (Nickelback, Jake Owen ). The trio built on a tune that Hubbard and Kelley had already started with brothers Chase and Jesse Rice. "It was one of those days where everything was firing perfectly," Moi told Billboard magazine. "No one got hung up or was banging their head on the wall trying to find a word that rhymes with 'car.'"
  • This won Single Of The Year at the 2013 CMA Awards. Florida Georgia Line also won Vocal Duo Of The Year at the same ceremony.
  • The remixed version of the song took Single of the Year at the 2013 American Music Awards. "I've got to thank my boy Nelly," said Tyler Hubbard. "Thank you for making this song epic for us. It's a huge honor."
  • NielsenSoundscan announced in early January 2014 that the song had overtaken Lady Antebellum's " Need You Now " to become the #1 best-selling digital Country single of all time.
  • The story of the song started one afternoon in Jesse Rice's living room when he, Kelley and Chase Rice were in the middle of a writing session. They had been penning another song when Kelley started playing something very different. "All of a sudden Brian [Kelley] pops up and strums a chord and starts humming this melody," Chase Rice told Radio.com. "That ended up being the 'Cruise' melody, and we looked at each other, all of us three, and we were like, 'What the hell is that?' He was like, 'I don't know, but we should write it.' As we got more into it, we completely dropped the other song we were writing that day, and I'm glad we did." Kelley continued the story. "The first line of the chorus got thrown out," he recalled. "We wrote it really quick, got it back in the studio, tweaked some things and added some things. Our producer Joey Moi really challenged us to tighten it up and to try and make it the best song we could. He made an amazing track to go along with that. It doesn't sound like anything else that's on the radio."
  • Bro-country is a term used in country music that refers to Nashville songs about young guys partying, drinking, admiring barely clad women and driving pickup trucks. The first use of 'bro-country' was by Jody Rosen of New York magazine in a August 11, 2013 article talking about this tune. "In short, 'Cruise' is bro-country: music by and of the tatted, gym-toned, party-hearty young American White dude," Rosen wrote. "It's a movement that has been gathering steam for several years now, and we may look back on 'Cruise' as a turning point, the moment when the balance of power tipped from an older generation of male country stars to the bros."
  • Producer Joey Moi used the hair metal band Def Leppard as a sonic template for the tune. "I came from a world where we spend days in the studio, trying to make a song better," he told Billboard magazine. "In my brain, the template is Def Leppard. Everything with them was a monster hook and a giant chorus."
  • This song came at a time when music-themed cruises were becoming popular, and accordingly, the duo set sail on the "This is How We Cruise" cruise on November 8, 2014. The four-day trip aboard the Norwegian Cruise Line vessel Norwegian Pearl featured two live performances by the duo, which each guest getting a photo with the guys. The cruise was so popular they did it again the next year.
  • Florida Georgia Line were a little-known duo when they recorded this song. Co-writer Chase Rice admitted to Taste of Country in a 2019 interview that he wasn't initially sold on Tyler Hubbard and Brian Kelley cutting "Cruise." "I wanted Luke Bryan or somebody big to cut it," he said. "And luckily they took it and made it what it was. Because at that time, nobody knew who they were. They know now."
  • "Cruise" was the first-ever country single to earn Diamond certification (10 million units sold) from the RIAA.
  • More songs from Florida Georgia Line
  • More songs that start with the chorus
  • More songs that were an artist's first hit
  • More songs from 2012
  • Lyrics to Cruise
  • Florida Georgia Line Artistfacts

Comments: 1

  • Camille from Toronto, Oh Every once in awhile, song lyrics come along that make you wonder why they hadn't already been written before. This is one of those songs. They just make perfect sense. Nelly's video of this is hot; I've never listened to his music before but love the mix of the Florida Georgia Line boys with Nelly. This one will always remind you of 2013/summer.

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Taste of Country

Florida Georgia Line Remix ‘Cruise’ With Rapper Nelly

Country duo  Florida Georgia Line  has seen some exciting things happen with their No. 1 hit 'Cruise,' with Taylor Swift recently adding her voice  alongside of Brian Kelley and Tyler Hubbard. Now, the band has announced a remix of their debut single with an unexpected twist, as hip-hop star Nelly will be featured on the track.

Kelley tells Country Weekly , "When we caught wind that Nelly was a fan of 'Cruise,' we were floored. We've been fans of his for years and thought it would be cool to team up on a remix." The remix, which leaked on YouTube last week (but has since been removed), is a collaboration that fans won't want to miss, as it combines the country newcomers that everyone's talking about with the 'Hot in Here' hitmaker.

Hubbard adds, "Nelly brought a fresh, unique sound to 'Cruise' and we're super-excited for our fans to hear." This isn't the first time the rapper has gone country, as he worked on 'Over and Over' with Tim McGraw , although that was almost a decade ago!

Fans of Florida Georgia Line and Nelly will be able to hear the collaboration on Apr. 2, when it's available for download. The popular duo will keep cruising along in their fast track to success , with coveted roles  opening for Swift and country star Luke Bryan . They're also nominated for Vocal Duo of the Year and New Artist of the Year at the 2013 ACM Awards.

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Florida Georgia Line

cruise nelly and florida georgia line

About Cruise

"Cruise" is a song recorded by American country music duo Florida Georgia Line. It was first released to iTunes in April 2012 and then to radio in August 2012 as the first single from their extended play It'z Just What We Do. It was written by group members Brian Kelley and Tyler Hubbard with Joey Moi, Chase Rice, and Jesse Rice (no relation). It is included on their first album for Republic Nashville, Here's to the Good Times, which was released on December 4. "Cruise" is the best-selling country digital song of all time in the United States as of January 2014. The song is considered the foremost example of the genre of country music termed "bro-country". The recording by Florida Georgia Line reached No. 16 on the Billboard Hot 100 on its initial release, but dropped off the Hot 100 in February 2013. A couple of months later, a remix by rapper Nelly was released, and the song then re-entered the top 10. The song reached a peak of No. 4 on the Hot 100 chart in its 34th week, one of the slowest climbs to the top five in the chart's history. The song also logged 24 weeks at No. 1 on Hot Country Songs, becoming the longest-running No. 1 single on that chart at the time, until it was surpassed in 2017 by Sam Hunt's "Body Like a Back Road".   more »

 Struggling with Cruise? Become a better singer in 30 days with these videos!

cruise nelly and florida georgia line

Florida Georgia Line is an American country music duo composed of Tyler Hubbard (from Monroe, Georgia) and Brian Kelley (from Ormond Beach, Florida). In December of 2011, they signed a publishing/production/management deal with Craig Wiseman (Big Loud Shirt Publishing), Kevin "Chief" Zaruk (Chief Music Management) and Joey Moi's (Mountain View Records) partnership, Big Loud Mountain. Their second EP, It'z Just What We Do, charted on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart. Florida Georgia Line played on the 2012 Country Throwdown Tour, sponsored as the Kingsford BBQ Band, along with acts such as Josh Thompson, Corey Smith, Gary Allan, Justin Moore, and Rodney Atkins. They have also opened for Brantley Gilbert, Jake Owen, Colt Ford and Dierks Bentley. more »

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Written by: Bryan Kelley, Chase Rice, Jesse Kenneth Robert Rice, Joseph Kelly Moi, Tyler Reed Hubbard

Lyrics © OLE MEDIA MANAGEMENT LP, Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC, Round Hill Music Big Loud Songs

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Watch CBS News

Beryl maps show path and landfall forecast of tropical storm that could become a hurricane again

By Cara Tabachnick , Emily Mae Czachor

Updated on: July 7, 2024 / 11:18 PM EDT / CBS News

After hitting Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula, Tropical Storm Beryl  was churning across the Gulf of Mexico on Sunday and is expected to regain hurricane strength before it makes landfall in the southern Texas Gulf Coast on Monday morning.

The storm blew past the Cayman Islands and Jamaica earlier in the week, initially making landfall over the island of Carriacou in Grenada while tearing through the Caribbean , strengthening at times to a Category 5 hurricane — the  strongest rating .

Beryl satellite image

What is Beryl's projected path?

Tropical Storm Beryl is moving through the Gulf of Mexico on Sunday and is forecast to regain hurricane strength as it approaches South Texas and Northeastern Mexico late Sunday, according to the hurricane center. It is forecast to make landfall in Texas on Monday morning. 

A portion of the Texas Gulf Coast could see a total of up to 15 inches of rain beginning Sunday and into midweek, the hurricane center said, along with life-threatening storm surge and powerful hurricane-force winds.    

Tropical storm conditions were expected to begin late Sunday, followed by hurricane conditions on Monday, the hurricane center forecast. 

"Beryl is forecast to bring damaging hurricane-force winds to portions of the lower and middle Texas coast late Sunday night and Monday," the hurricane center said, adding that storm preparations "should be rushed to completion before tropical storm conditions begin late Sunday."  

beryl-cone-11-pm.png

A storm surge warning was in effect from Mesquite Bay to Sabine Pass as of Sunday night. Texas coastal areas could see storm surges of up to 6 feet above ground, the hurricane center forecasted.    

"The combination of storm surge and tide will cause normally dry areas near the coast to be flooded by rising waters moving inland from the shoreline," the hurricane center said. 

Beryl had made landfall in Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula Friday as a Category 2 hurricane, just northeast of the resort town of Tulum, before weakening to a tropical storm.

As of Sunday evening, Beryl was centered 110 miles southeast of Corpus Christi, Texas, and 75 miles south-southeast of Matagorda, Texas. It was headed north-northwest at 10 mph with maximum sustained winds of 70 mph. A Category 1 hurricane has minimum sustained winds of at least 74 mph.   

A hurricane warning was in effect for the Texas Gulf Coast from Mesquite Bay north to Port Bolivar, a town about 60 miles southeast of Houston. By Sunday night, the hurricane warnings for south of Mesquite Bay had been changed to a tropical storm warning. Tropical storm warnings were discontinued by Sunday evening south of Port Mansfield, Texas, and for portions of the northeastern coast of Mexico.

beryl-wind-speed-11-pm.png

Hurricane center senior specialist Jack Beven told The Associated Press that Beryl is likely to make landfall somewhere between Brownsville and a bit north of Corpus Christi.

Beven told the AP the official forecast has Beryl gaining 17 to 23 mph in wind speed in 24 hours, but noted the storm intensified more rapidly than forecasters expected earlier in the Caribbean.

"People in southern Texas now need to really keep an eye on the progress of Beryl," Beven said.

Where is Beryl bringing rain and flooding?

Hurricane conditions were possible in South Texas on Monday, preceded by tropical storm conditions on Sunday. 

"Heavy rainfall of 5 to 10 inches with localized amounts of 15 inches is expected across portions of the Texas Gulf Coast and eastern Texas beginning late Sunday through midweek. This rainfall will likely produce areas of flash and urban flooding, some of which may be locally considerable. Minor to isolated moderate river flooding is also possible," the center said. 

Beryl became the  first hurricane  of the 2024  Atlantic hurricane season  on Saturday and rapidly strengthened. It first reached Category 4 on Sunday, wavering back to Category 3 before returning to Category 4 on Monday and then becoming a Category 5 later Monday night. It is the first major hurricane east of the Lesser Antilles on record for June, according to Philip Klotzbach, Colorado State University hurricane researcher.

Brian McNoldy, a tropical meteorology researcher for the University of Miami, told the AP that warm waters fueled Beryl, with ocean heat content in the deep Atlantic the highest on record for this time of year.

Beryl has also set records  as the first June hurricane ever to hit Category 4, the farthest east a storm has ever hit Category 4, and the first storm before September to go from tropical depression to major hurricane in under 48 hours, CBS News weather producer David Parkinson reported.

Beryl was also the earliest Category 5 hurricane ever recorded in the Atlantic basin and was only the second Category 5 storm recorded in July since 2005, according to the hurricane center.

Brian Dakss, Alex Sundby and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Cara Tabachnick is a news editor at CBSNews.com. Cara began her career on the crime beat at Newsday. She has written for Marie Claire, The Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal. She reports on justice and human rights issues. Contact her at [email protected]

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IMAGES

  1. ‎Cruise (Remix) [feat. Nelly]

    cruise nelly and florida georgia line

  2. Sneak Peek Of Florida Georgia Line's "Cruise" Remix Video Featuring

    cruise nelly and florida georgia line

  3. Florida Georgia Line

    cruise nelly and florida georgia line

  4. Nelly Teams Up with Florida Georgia Line for 'Lil Bit' Music Video

    cruise nelly and florida georgia line

  5. Florida Georgia Line, Nelly ‘Cruise’ Together; Steel Magnolia Breakup

    cruise nelly and florida georgia line

  6. Fox News Flash top entertainment headlines for June 17

    cruise nelly and florida georgia line

VIDEO

  1. Cruise

  2. Cruise

  3. Florida Georgia Line

  4. Florida Georgia Line Ft. Nelly: Cruise (Remix) (PAL/High Tone Only) (2013)

  5. Cruise

  6. Florida Georgia Line: Cruise (Remix) [ft. Nelly] (High Tone) (2012)

COMMENTS

  1. Florida Georgia Line

    Do you want to cruise with Florida Georgia Line and Nelly? Watch the official music video of their hit remix, featuring a catchy rap verse and a fun party vibe. You'll be singing along to this ...

  2. Cruise (song)

    Cover for remix featuring Nelly. Music video. "Cruise" on YouTube. " Cruise " is a song recorded by American country music duo Florida Georgia Line. It was first released to iTunes in April 2012 and then to radio on August 6, 2012 [1] as the first single from their extended play It'z Just What We Do. [2] It was written by group members Brian ...

  3. Florida Georgia Line

    Girl, you sure got the beat in my chest bumpin'. Hell, I can't get you out of my head. [Interlude] Baby, you a song, you make me wanna roll my windows down and cruise (Hahaha) Down a back road ...

  4. Florida Georgia Line & Nelly's "Cruise" at 10: Its Story & Its Impact

    How Florida Georgia Line & Nelly's 'Cruise' Teamup Made (Controversial) History. 10 years ago, the team-up reinvigorated a hit and broke genre barriers and chart records, pointing the way to ...

  5. Florida Georgia Line

    [Intro: Florida Georgia Line & Nelly] / Baby, you a song, you make me wanna roll my windows down and cruise / (Let's go) / [Refrain: Florida Georgia Line & Nelly] / I got my

  6. Florida Georgia Line

    Music video by Florida Georgia Line performing Cruise. (C) 2013 Universal Republic Nashville Records#FloridaGeorgiaLine #Cruise #vevo #country #vevoofficial ...

  7. Florida Georgia Line & Nelly Perform "Cruise"

    Wow, wow, wow ‼️ Cannot believe it's been 10 years since Florida Georgia Line released their first single and we've been cruisin' ever since! 🎶Paramount+ is...

  8. Florida Georgia Line

    iTunes: http://bit.ly/127PVog Music video by Florida Georgia Line performing Cruise (Remix). ©: Republic Nashville, a division of UMG Recordings, Inc.

  9. FLORIDA GEORGIA LINE & NELLY

    Baby you a song You make me wanna roll my windows down and cruise<br>I got my windows down, and the radio up, get your radio up<br>I got my windows down, and the radio up, get your radio up<br>Yeah when I first saw that bikini top on her<br>She's poppin' right out of the South Georgia water<br ...

  10. Nelly and Florida Georgia Line

    Baby, you a song (hey) You make me wanna roll my windows down and cruise Let's go I got my windows down and the radio up Get your radio up What up Nelly? Alright I got my windows down and the radio up Get your radio up Yeah, when I first saw that bikini top on her She's poppin' right out of the South Georgia water Thought, oh, good Lord, she had them long tanned legs Couldn't help myself so I ...

  11. Cruise · Florida Georgia Line feat. Nelly (Official music video

    2.1M views, 61K likes, 21K loves, 1.2K comments, 50K shares, Facebook Watch Videos from Florida Georgia Line: Cruise · Florida Georgia Line feat. Nelly... Nelly Released 2013

  12. Florida Georgia Line Hit the Road With Nelly in 'Cruise' Remix Video

    Amy Sciarretto Published: May 16, 2013. Florida Georgia Line hit the road to do the obvious -- cruise! -- with St. Louis rapper Nelly in the video for the urban-flecked remix of the duo's smash ...

  13. Cruise by Florida Georgia Line

    The cruise was so popular they did it again the next year. Florida Georgia Line were a little-known duo when they recorded this song. Co-writer Chase Rice admitted to Taste of Country in a 2019 interview that he wasn't initially sold on Tyler Hubbard and Brian Kelley cutting "Cruise." "I wanted Luke Bryan or somebody big to cut it," he said.

  14. Cruise (Remix) · Florida Georgia Line feat. Nelly (Official music video

    Cruise (Remix) · Florida Georgia Line feat. Nelly Released 2013

  15. Florida Georgia Line

    Music video by Florida Georgia Line performing Cruise. (C) 2012 Universal Republic Nashville Records#FloridaGeorgiaLine #Cruise #vevo #country #vevoofficial ...

  16. Florida Georgia Line Remix 'Cruise' With Rapper Nelly

    Country Weekly. Country duo Florida Georgia Line has seen some exciting things happen with their No. 1 hit 'Cruise,' with Taylor Swift recently adding her voice alongside of Brian Kelley and Tyler ...

  17. Florida Georgia Line

    I can see you got a thing for the fast life. So come on, shawty, let me show you what the fast like. Whipping 'cross the border, Florida into Georgia. 'Cause, baby, you a song. And you make me wanna roll my, roll my, roll my, r-r-r-roll. Baby, you a song. You make me wanna roll my windows down and cruise.

  18. Cruise

    Lyrics. Baby you're a song You make me wanna roll my windows down and cruise Yeah, when I first saw that bikini top on her She's poppin' right out of the South Georgia water Thought, "Oh, good Lord, she had them long tanned legs" Couldn't help myself so I walked up and said Baby you're a song You make me wanna roll my windows down and cruise ...

  19. Amazon.com: Florida Georgia Line Cruise With Nelly

    1-16 of 31 results for "florida georgia line cruise with nelly" Results. Cruise (Remix) [feat. Nelly] by Florida Georgia Line. 4.6 out of 5 stars. 409. MP3 Music. Listen with Music Unlimited. Or $1.29 to buy MP3. Cruise (Remix) by Florida Georgia Line & Nelly. 4.6 out of 5 stars. 409. MP3 Music. Listen with Music Unlimited.

  20. Nelly and Florida Georgia Line

    Baby, you a song (hey) You make me wanna roll my windows down and cruise Let's go I got my windows down and the radio up Get your radio up What up Nelly? Alright I got my windows down and the radio up Get your radio up Yeah, when I first saw that bikini top on her She's poppin' right out of the South Georgia water Thought, oh, good Lord, she had them long tanned legs Couldn't help myself so I ...

  21. ️ Cruise

    27 seconds · Clipped by Abhidi Chatterjee · Original video "Florida Georgia Line - Cruise - (Instrumental Mix)" by RandomUploader

  22. Beryl maps show path and landfall forecast of tropical storm that could

    "Beryl is forecast to bring damaging hurricane-force winds to portions of the lower and middle Texas coast late Sunday night and Monday," the hurricane center said, adding that storm preparations ...

  23. Florida Georgia Line

    Enjoy the official lyric video of Cruise, the hit song by Florida Georgia Line that topped the country charts for 24 weeks. Sing along with the catchy tune and feel the summer vibe. Don't miss ...

  24. Nelly, Florida Georgia Line

    Official video for "Lil Bit" by Nelly & Florida Georgia Line. Listen & Download "Lil Bit" out now: https://nelly.lnk.to/LilBit Amazon Music - https://nelly.l...