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It Ain't Safe No More

It Aint Safe No More
  • List Price: $11.98
  • Buy New: $3.66
  • as of 5/26/2012 15:15 EDT details
  • You Save: $8.32 (69%)
In Stock
New (17) Used (59) from $0.01
  • Seller:the_disc_connection
  • Sales Rank:42,196
  • Format:Explicit Lyrics
  • Media:Audio CD
  • Discs:1
  • Shipping Weight (lbs):0.2
  • Dimensions (in):5.6 x 5 x 0.5
  • Release Date:November 26, 2002
  • MPN:808132004329
  • UPC:808132004329
  • EAN:0808132004329
  • ASIN:B000077W8N
Availability:Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks
  • Intro
  • It AinÂ’t Safe No MoreÂ… (featuring Meka)
  • What Do You Do When YouÂ’re Branded
  • Call The Ambulance
  • We GoinÂ’ To Do It To Ya
  • What Up
  • Turn Me Up Some
  • Make It Clap (featuring Spliff Star)
  • Take It Off Part 2 (featuring Meka)
  • Taste It
  • Hey Ladies
  • I Know What You Want (featuring Mariah Carey & The Flipmode Squad)
  • Riot
  • Hop
  • Together (featuring Rah Digga)
  • StruttinÂ’ Like A G.O.D.
  • The Struggle Will Be Lost (featuring Carl Thomas)
  • Till ItÂ’s Gone
  • Make It Clap (Remix) (Hidden Track) (featuring Sean Paul)


Editorial Reviews:
Album Description
Japanese limited edition reissue of 2002 album includes one exclusive bonus track. Details TBA. BMG. 2004.
Amazon.com
Busta Rhymes's sixth solo album loosely follows in the tradition of his 1998 Extinction Level Event and 2000's Anarchy, offering up lucid, timely commentary over futuristic beats. In fact, his previous new-world-order rants provide a perfect prelude to his post-9/11 analysis on the title track. While Busta offers his unpredictable array of flows across the usual balance of club tracks ("Make It Clap"), hottie songs of praise ("Hey Ladies"), and obligatory street anthems ("What Do You Do When You're Branded"), one can't help wonder why he'd mix in tired concepts (south Asian compositions on "Take It Off Part 2") or perform the pimped-out, playa routine on "Taste It," with its sundry (yawn) sexual references. Like its predecessor, Genesis, this album is sonically superior to most in the marketplace, thanks to contributions from the Neptunes. While big-name collaborations with Mariah Carey on "I Know What You Want" (where Busta croons) and Carl Thomas ("The Struggle Will Be Lost") don't exactly change the price of butter, hey, at least Busta's not pointlessly advertising chi-chi liquor companies this time around. --Dalton Higgins

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