Pray IV Reign (Deluxe Edition) [PA]Jim Jones (Rap)
Release Date: 03/24/2009
Original Release:
2009
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 1058655_CD
UPC # 886973271025
Label: Columbia (USA)
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Buying Info
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Disc: 1
1.
Album Intro - (featuring Starr)
2.
Pulling Me Back - (featuring Chink Santana)
3.
Let It Out
4.
How To Be A Boss - (featuring NOE/Ludacris/Busta Rhymes)
5.
Medicine - (featuring Chink Santana/NOE)
6.
Frienemies
7.
Precious - (featuring Ryan Leslie)
8.
Blow The Bank - (featuring Oshy)
9.
This Is For My Bitches - (featuring Oshy)
10.
Girlfriend - (featuring Oshy/Juelz Santana)
11.
This Is The Life - (featuring Starr)
12.
My My My - (featuring Rawanna)
13.
Pop Off - (featuring Mel Matrix/NOE)
14.
Pop Champagne - (featuring Ron Browz/Juelz Santana)
15.
Rain - (featuring NOE/Starr/Rell)
16.
Na Na Nana Na Na - (featuring NOE/Brittney Taylor)
Performer: Jim Jones (Rap)
Artist: Starr; Chink Santana; NOE; Ludacris; Busta Rhymes; Ryan Leslie; Oshy; Juelz Santana; Rawanna; Mel Matrix; Ron Browz; Rell; Brittney Taylor Distributor: Sony Music Distribution ( Notes: Never hailed as the strongest lyricist out of the Diplomats clique, Jim Jones has always made up for it with the weight of his street credibility and his distinct vocal presence that exudes restrained menace. On his fourth full-length LP (and first for Columbia), the self-proclaimed Harlem Capo shines, thanks in large part to inventive street-hop beats from a production team including Chink Santana, Supa Dave West, Triple-A, and Ron Browz. While many of Jones's concepts are recycled, as he muses on backstabbers ("Frienemies") and brags about his lavish lifestyle ("This is the Life," "Pop Champagne"), he still executes them well. PRAY IV REIGN is a rare hip-hop album in that the intro--which sees Jones taking in O.G. wisdom from a Harlem old-timer over a `70s soul-drenched beat by No I.D.--is by far the tightest track. The three years between Hustler's P.O.M.E. and Pray IV Reign saw a slew of Jim Jones releases -- mixtapes, Christmas EPs, plus LPs with his Byrd Gang crew -- but there's little doubt that this is the proper follow-up to the album that gave the world the massive hit "We Fly High." One listen to the epic intro and it's obvious it also aims higher artistically, influenced by the passing of Byrd Gang member Stack Bundles, beefs with members of the Dipset crew, plus the creation of the man's off-Broadway production, The Hip Hop Monologues: Inside the Life and Mind of Jim Jones. Reign is basically the soundtrack to Monologues but it stands alone just fine, successfully mixing straight-up club anthems like "Pop Champagne" and "Na Na Nana Na Na" with much deeper numbers. Bundles is mourned on the moving "My My My," which features the perfectly Jones aside "I hope there's a Harlem in Heaven." A question mark must have been dropped off the title of "This Is the Life," as the rapper's unsure "There's no regrets in life/How's that sound?" rides over the background singers' hook of "Is there a Heaven for us?" Since it's directed at his son ("A miracle on Flatbush Avenue/I still made it back to say 'Push!' when she was havin' you"), "Rain" doesn't question these contrasts and presents them as the cold hard facts of life. It's affiliate NOE who really lays it on the line during "Rain," offering "Had to be a felon/Hated bein' pauper/Read the book of life/Satan was the author." Even with special guest Ludacris on the cut, NOE also wins on key track "How to Be a Boss," and as "Frienemies" addresses Jones' volatile relationships with Cam'ron and Max B, the grand victory of Reign becomes how well it shakes the past and presents the current Byrd Gang crew as true players. Success has always been Jones' revenge, and while his ringleader ways allow this autobiographical album to sometimes go wildly off concept, it's clearly his most inspired set of songs to date. ~ David Jeffries
Rolling Stone (p.69) - 3.5 stars out of 5 -- "[H]is open-armed commercialism mostly works: 'Na Na NaNa Na Na' turns a kid's chant into a catchy cash-flaunting song..."
Spin (p.86) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "New York hustler Jim Jones is, despite his own best efforts, effortlessly charming."
XXL (Magazine Publisher) (pp.101-102) - "With even more adventurous choices and evident spurts of maturity, Jim displays the chops to maintain his status as a compelling hip-hop figure."
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Similar Genres:
East Coast Rap |