Bestsellers > Music > Pop Rap
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Connected(more) »rank: 7359by: The Foreign Exchange
:Album Description:The Foreign Exchange first 'met' in mid-2002, when Phonte (who resides in North Carolina and is also a member of the underground rap trio Little Brother), heard some of Nicolay’s music online and asked to rhyme over one of his tracks. When Big Pooh of Little Brother, lent his vocals to the track, the song became 'Light It Up,' and was featured as a B-side single for the group’s acclaimed 2003 effort, The Listening. 'Nic was sending me some of the most beautiful stuff I’d ever heard in my life,' Phonte says emphatically. 'They inspired me so much that I ... |
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LAX [Deluxe Edition](more) »rank: 5668by: The Game
:Album Description:Deluxe Edition. Explicit Version. The Game returns with his third and supposedly last CD LAX. Keisha Cole is featured on the lead off track 'Game's Pain.' Other guests include Ice Cube, Raekwon, Ludacris, Bilal and Raheem DeVaughn, appearing on 'State of Emergency,' 'Bulletproof Diaries,' 'Cali Sunshine' and 'Touchdown,' respectively. Cool & Dre, Irv Gotti, Nottz, J.R. Rotem, Scott Storch, DJ Toomp, Hi-Tek and Kanye West lend their production efforts to the album. This deluxe edition comes expanded packaging and artwork. |
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The Cha-Cha Slide(more) »rank: 2845by: Mr. C The Slide Man
:Album Description:Deluxe Edition. Explicit Version. The Game returns with his third and supposedly last CD LAX. Keisha Cole is featured on the lead off track 'Game's Pain.' Other guests include Ice Cube, Raekwon, Ludacris, Bilal and Raheem DeVaughn, appearing on 'State of Emergency,' 'Bulletproof Diaries,' 'Cali Sunshine' and 'Touchdown,' respectively. Cool & Dre, Irv Gotti, Nottz, J.R. Rotem, Scott Storch, DJ Toomp, Hi-Tek and Kanye West lend their production efforts to the album. This deluxe edition comes expanded packaging and artwork. |
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Fun DMC(more) »rank: 7829by: People Under the Stairs
:Album Description:As longtime fans know, though, when you hear a PUTS record, all the work, from the beats to the rhymes to the scratching to the artwork (Fun comes with a comic book written by the rappers themselves), is almost inevitably done strictly by the duo themselves. Instead of cashing in on hot outside producers or of-the-moment emcees, the pair has always been fiercely independent, with barbecue guests the only collaborators on the 20-track album. The duo holed up in Thes's new home studio with no outside producers or engineers to work on Fun DMC. To achieve the sounds floating in ... |
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Whitey Ford Sings the Blues(more) »rank: 5564by: Everlast
: :When you think about it, House of Pain really were ahead of their time. Tracks like 'Jump Around' may have been light on the content side, but they delivered in the production department--they played with sounds in the same way that Missy Elliott and Timbaland have popularized, and they crossed over to a rock audience long before Puffy ever tried it. On Whitey Ford Sings the Blues, Everlast's second solo album, the opening is an appropriation of 'The Fat Boys are Back'; a couple of songs favor a sensitive folk-rock touch, with Everlast on guitar; and others reach back for House ... |
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White Van Music(more) »rank: 4567by: Jake One
: :Seattle super producer steps from behind the boards to present his own debut. Polishing his production chops over the last decade, Jake One has crafted musical soundscapes for everyone from De La Soul to 50 Cent. Featuring an engaging cast of emerging underground artists, as well as some of hip-hop's most respected mainstream acts, Jake One's release will blur the line between underground and hip-hop, just as his stellar production career has. Appearances by MF Doom, Brother Ali, Young Buck, Busta Rhymes, Alchemist, Prodigy, Keak Da Sneak, and more. |
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Fear of a Black Planet(more) »rank: 3212by: Public Enemy
: essential recording:PE's third album is dense, heavy, and urgent as a bullet. Fear of a Black Planet single-handedly added half a dozen phrases to the language, and not just from Chuck D.'s troop-rallying bellow--Flavor Flav's '911 Is a Joke' is as catchy an indictment of urban policy as anyone has ever come up with. The Bomb Squad's music is complicated, challenging, terse, and totally funky, and Chuck matches it with one impassioned pronouncement after another: on Hollywood's racism, on miscegenation, on 'real history / Not his story.' The album ends with 'Fight the Power,' the group's ultimate statement of purpose, ... |
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Live Trucker(more) »rank: 8481by: Kid Rock & the Twisted Brown Trucker Band
: :Essentially a live greatest-hits package, 'Live' Trucker, recorded before several different Detroit-area crowds, reminds us not only that Kid has long been an entertainer first and songwriter second but that he can surprise even the most jaded listener at the most unexpected moment. He works the urban hillbilly angle to the hilt, gives shouts out to Lynyrd Skynyrd and Cobo Hall and offers hope to disenfranchised kids in crummy apartment complexes and trailer parks from sea to shining sea via 'Rock 'n' Roll Pain Train' and 'American Bad Ass.' Although the last name is Rock, Kid's never been afraid of letting ... |
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R.(more) »rank: 4005by: R Kelly
: :A double disc may seem indulgent after barely a decade in the biz, but after meandering through the commercial minefields of innocent fun (1992's Born into the '90s), pure raunch (1993's 12 Play), and pop crossover (1995's R. Kelly), Kelly has come close to the perfect mix--and if it takes two discs to do so, why not? There are still moments of indulgence (the forced theatrics of 'The Opera'), and the occasional venture into mediocrity ('Did You Ever Think?'), but the sheer funk of tracks like 'Home Alone' (a head-bobber featuring Keith Murray) and 'Dollar Bill' (featuring--surprise!--Foxy Brown) allows you to ... |
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The Preface(more) »rank: 7073by: Elzhi
: :A double disc may seem indulgent after barely a decade in the biz, but after meandering through the commercial minefields of innocent fun (1992's Born into the '90s), pure raunch (1993's 12 Play), and pop crossover (1995's R. Kelly), Kelly has come close to the perfect mix--and if it takes two discs to do so, why not? There are still moments of indulgence (the forced theatrics of 'The Opera'), and the occasional venture into mediocrity ('Did You Ever Think?'), but the sheer funk of tracks like 'Home Alone' (a head-bobber featuring Keith Murray) and 'Dollar Bill' (featuring--surprise!--Foxy Brown) allows you to ... |



