Description:
Don't believe the hype: Bad Boy Records did not invent the remix, the company has just done a good job using it. But the past is the past. Don't come here if you're looking for Puffy's earlier ground-breaking work with the likes of Jodeci and Super Cat. The "hits" here are of a more recent vintage, and if these remixes are any indication, it seems Diddy has reached the bottom of his bag of tricks. Screeching bells, Ghostface Killah and the return of the MacK (Craig Mack) give G Dep's "Special Delivery" (from last year's Child of the Ghetto) that hyped Bad Boy flavour of yore, but it's all downhill from there.
Don't believe the hype: Bad Boy Records did not invent the remix, the company has just done a good job using it. But the past is the past. Don't come here if you're looking for Puffy's earlier ground-breaking work with the likes of Jodeci and Super Cat. The "hits" here are of a more recent vintage, and if these remixes are any indication, it seems Diddy has reached the bottom of his bag of tricks. Screeching bells, Ghostface Killah and the return of the MacK (Craig Mack) give G Dep's "Special Delivery" (from last year's Child of the Ghetto) that hyped Bad Boy flavour of yore, but it's all downhill from there. Lines such as "We used to drive the whole city wild" make listening to "I Need a Girl", Puffy's maudlin ode to ex-squeeze J Lo, a cringe-inducing experience, and the producer-rapper's painfully weak rhyme ruins Mary J Blige's "No More Drama". Most disturbing is Puffy's crass opportunism: Biggie's "voice from the grave" duet with Ashanti (on "Unfoolish") is downright creepy and ultimately unnecessary. --Rebecca Levine
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Manufacturer: Bad Boy
Release date: 27 May 2002
Number of discs: 1
EAN: 0743219454027 UPC: 743219454027
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