A mid-2000s R&B singer known for a chart-topping collaboration with 50 Cent.
For the full picture, start with 'Candy Shop' and then try 'Bring da roof down' to hear her move toward dancefloor energy. Those two frame her sound pretty well.
Her name is tied to 'Candy Shop,' the 2005 hit with 50 Cent that sparked conversations with its suggestive lyrics. That track anchored her debut album 'Olivia' and remains her signature, even as later songs like 'Bring da roof down' leaned into dance-pop. She represents a specific moment when pop-R&B crossed into mainstream rap circles.
She emerged in the mid-2000s with 'Candy Shop' and followed it with singles like 'Best Friend' and 'Twist It' featuring G-Unit members. Her albums shifted from the self-titled debut to later releases like 'Back to da Dancefloor,' blending R&B with dance elements. She hasn't sustained that early chart presence, but the Trinidad-born singer's work from that period holds a place in 2000s pop-rap lore.
Keep it compact: a lyric you come back to, a live memory, or the part of the catalog you would point someone toward first.
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