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| Hardcore poet rocks the mic on smash singles Good Times (I Get High), The Life (with Pharoahe Monch), My Brother and more smash tunes. |
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| 1 Intro |
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| 2 Good Times |
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| 3 Yall Know We in Here |
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| 4 A Gangster and a Gentleman |
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| 5 Black Magic |
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| 6 Daddy Get That Cash |
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| 7 Lick Shots |
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| 8 And I Came To... |
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| 9 Get Paid |
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| 10 A** Bag (Skit) |
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| 11 I'm a RuffRyder |
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| 12 Soul Clap |
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| 13 We Thugs (My ******) |
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| 14 Styles |
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| 15 Barbershop (Skit) |
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| 16 Listen |
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| 17 Niggas Flippin (Skit) |
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| 18 Yall Don't Wanna F*** |
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| 19 S*** Done Changed (Skit) |
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| 20 Nobody Believes Me |
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| 21 Dedication (Skit) |
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| 22 My Brother |
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| 23 Outro |
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| 24 The Life |
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Album Review
As one-third of the intrepid street rap trio L.O.X., Styles Paniro had seen hip-hop go through a number of awkward phases since the death of friend and mentor the Notorious B.I.G.. Biggie Smalls and Sean "Puffy" Combs were the first to recognize the talents of Styles and fellow Yonkers natives Jadakiss and Sheek Luciano. After Biggie's passing, L.O.X. released their debut, "Money, Power & Respect", in 1998, and Styles was always the MC who listeners looked forward to hearing on the track. After L.O.X. became fed up with Puff Daddy's glammed-out approach to the rap game, they rediscovered their gully roots and resurfaced with DMX, Swizz Beats, and the Ruff Ryder camp in early 2000, releasing the far-more-edgy "We Are the Streets" later that same year. After fellow L.O.X. member Jadakiss found solo success with his summer 2001 release "Kiss the Game Goodbye", it was only a matter of time before Styles, every bit as talented a lyricist as Jada but perhaps a little less marketable, came forth with a solo venture. The buzz for this album was spurred by two singles in particular: the soulful memoir "My Life," featuring Pharoah Monche (originally released on Rawkus' "Soundbombing III"), and the herbalist's anthem "Good Times." But this album is more than just a two-track wonder, as Styles divides equal time between his bipolar persona. On the gangster side, Styles offers thuggish joints like the kettle-drum-laced "Styles," the stirring "Lick Shots" featuring the L.O.X. crew, and the party banger "Soul Clap," which loops a snippet from the classic Native Tongues remix of "Scenario." Styles shows a more humanist side on the laid-back "Black Magic" featuring Angie Stone and expends heartfelt lamentation on the death of his older brother on "My Brother." The album's haphazard track sequencing detracts from its overall quality, as the songs do not transition well from one to the next. Also, despite Styles' made-man, one-foot-in-the-spirit realm approach, the MC fails to carry a couple of tracks (which may be the result of some spotty, soulless production). These minor glitches aside, Styles' debut hits hard like a double shot of Glenlivet or a haymaker to the thorax. ~ M.F. DiBella, All Music Guide
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Biography

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