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| The "Harlem Hustler" is back in form. Includes Welcome To New York City (with Jay-Z), plus smash singles Oh Boy, The ROC (Just Fire), Hey Ma, etc. |
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| 1 Intro |
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| 2 Losing Weight, Pt. 2 |
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| 3 Oh Boy |
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| 4 Live My Life (Leave Me Alone) |
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| 5 Daydreaming |
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| 6 Come Home With Me |
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| 7 Welcome to New York City |
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| 8 Hey Ma |
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| 9 On Fire Tonight |
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| 10 Stop Calling |
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| 11 I Just Wanna |
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| 12 Dead or Alive |
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| 13 The Roc (Just Fire) |
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| 14 Boy Boy |
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| 15 Tomorrow |
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Album Review
Just when seemed as if everyone had forgotten about Cam'ron, he returned in 2002 as part of Jay-Z's industry-dominating Roc-a-Fella collective. If that wasn't reason enough to inspire curiosity, Cam'ron's lead single, "Oh Boy," blew up urban radio all summer. His rugged rapping and Just Blaze's soulful production made "Oh Boy" the huge success that it was, yet the joy of hearing Cam'ron on the radio again also had a bit to do with the revival. The Harlem rapper had fallen off the map after "S.D.E." (2000), his poorly recieved album from two years earlier. Just two years before that, Cam'ron was one of the industry's most promising pop-rappers. His first album, "Confessions of Fire" (1998), produced several singles, including his collaboration with Mase, "Horse & Carriage." However, 1998 felt like the distant past in 2002, and Cam'ron needed a big comeback after falling into obscurity during the interim. "Come Home With Me" is indeed that big comeback. Even though the Roc-a-Fella roster appears on only two songs -- "Welcome To New York City," featuring Jay-Z, and "The Roc (Just Fire)," featuring Memphis Bleek and Beanie Sigel -- Cam'ron doesn't really need the assistance here. He comes hard on most tracks, yet his muscle is complemented well by producer Just Blaze and his trademark sampling style. Just Blaze doesn't produce every track on this album, but he does provide the key moments: "Oh Boy" and "The Roc (Just Fire)." Overall, Cam'ron couldn't return with a stonger comeback album than this: He's affiliated with one of the industry's most successful labels, helmed by a hot producer, and armed with a dynamite lead single. Cam'ron may not record the style of pop-rap you once associated with him, but when the resulting album is this solid from top to bottom, you really can't argue. Instead, you should be thankful. ~ Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide
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Biography


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Other albums by: Cam'ron |
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