Album Results
Album Reviews
The few rap-R&B hybrids on Rule 3:36 (2000) paid off large dividends by the time of Ja Rule's next album, Pain Is Love. A day didn't pass between the release of the two albums when Ja Rule's voice couldn't be heard on urban radio, and at the time of Pain Is Love's release in October 2001, he had not one but two singles getting nonstop airplay: "Livin' It Up" and "I'm Real," the latter a Jennifer Lopez song featuring him as a guest rapper. It should be no surprise then to discover that Pain Is Love follows the same formula that had made Rule 3:36 such a commercial success: craft some radio-friendly crossover singles, often featuring pretty young female R&B singers as romantic counterpoints, and then fill out the album with hardcore rap, often featuring Murder Inc.'s roster of secondary rappers, to sustain Ja Rule's thug reputation. Actually, this formula is fine-tuned on Pain Is Love to account for some exceptions -- for instance, the lead single, "Livin' It Up," interpolates Stevie Wonder's "Do I Do" for its crossover-R&B aspect, while the title track recycles an old, generally unheard 2Pac verse to great effect -- and a significantly more balanced album is the result. Plus, there's enough strong material here to encourage full-album listening, as the crossover singles no longer stand out apart from the hardcore rap filler to the degree that they did on Rule 3:36. ~ Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide
Track Listing
| 1. Pain Is Love |
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| 2. Dial M For Murder |
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| 3. Livin' It Up |
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| 4. The Inc. |
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| 5. Always On Time |
Ja Rule Feat. A... |
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| 6. Down A** B**ch |
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| 7. Never Again |
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| 8. Worldwide Gangsta |
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| 9. Leo: (SKit) |
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| 10. I'm Real: (Murder Remix) |
Jennifer Lopez |
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| 11. Smokin And Ridin |
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| 12. X |
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| 13. Big Remo: (Skit) |
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| 14. Lost Little Girl |
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| 15. So Much Pain |
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| 16. Pain Is Love |
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| Featured Review | |
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Dead And Gone T.I. Feat. Justin Timberlake |
| Encounters with the law, gun charges and more rap beefs than a butchers have meant that T.I.'s career has never been far from controversy. However on his latest single, 'Dead and Gone', the southern rapper shows his will to put his past behind him. Free of the shouty refrains that peppered his last two massive hits singles, 'Dead And Gone', sees T.I.'s rap much more focused and serious, inspired by the recent loss of a friend and an ongoing court case. The production too is a departure from T.I.'s previous singles favouring a cinematic style orchestra and piano combo to vocoder infused, club beats. Chorus duties are taken care of by the decidedly un-gangster Justin Timberlake; although the chorus line "The old me is dead and gone" could just as easily refer to Justin Timberlake's transformation from Mickey Mouse Club member to urban darling as T.I.'s reform to a law abiding citizen. All in all this probably lacks the punch to repeat the enormous success of 'Whatever You Like' and 'Live Your Life'; however you would do well to look out for the next T.I./Justin hook up, 'If I', which sees Justin return to his wanna-be Michael Jackson, falsetto disco roots with highly pleasing results.~Stephen Titmus~Copyright © Shazam Entertainment Limited 2009. All rights reserved | |
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