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Hollywood: A Story of a Dozen Roses (Deluxe Version)

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Download links and information about Hollywood: A Story of a Dozen Roses (Deluxe Version) by Jamie Foxx. This album was released in 2015 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Soul genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 3:29 minutes.

Artist: Jamie Foxx
Release date: 2015
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Soul
Tracks: 18
Duration: 3:29
Buy on Amazon $12.99
Buy on iTunes $12.99
Buy on iTunes $12.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Dozen Roses, Pt. 1 [Explicit]
2. You Changed Me [Explicit] (featuring Chris Brown)
3. Like A Drum [Explicit] (featuring The Wale)
4. Another Dose [Explicit]
5. Tease (featuring Pharrell)
6. Baby's In Love [Explicit] (featuring Main Chick) 3:29
7. Text Message
8. Hollywood [Explicit]
9. Vegas Confessions [Explicit]
10. Socialite [Explicit]
11. Dozen Roses, Pt. 2
12. In Love By Now
13. Jumping Out The Window [Explicit]
14. On The Dot [Explicit] (featuring Fabolous)
15. Dozen Roses, Pt. 3
16. Right Now [Explicit]
17. Pretty Thing [Explicit]
18. Ain't My Fault [Explicit]

Details

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After the 2010 release of Best Night of My Life, Jamie Foxx put his music career to the side for the longest period since 2005's Unpredictable. When he returned in 2014 with "Party Ain't a Party," a collaboration with DJ Mustard and 2 Chainz, it was clear he was content to play the same role in R&B, as a partying loverman with winking punch lines, singing about shawties, booties, and twerking. The song didn't stick enough to make either the standard or the deluxe versions of Hollywood: A Story of a Dozen Roses. Though follow-up release "Ain't My Fault" was relatively serious, it too was set in the club and failed to register on any Billboard chart, though it was placed on the deluxe edition. Some songs here, like the consecutive piano ballads "In Love by Now" and "Jumping Out the Window," do lack mischief, but Foxx otherwise continues to put forth quite an effort to prevent his audience's average age from reaching 30. Kid Ink, Wale, and Chris Brown are among his guests, and he snags producer Boi-1da for sleek tracks such as "Like a Drum," with lyrics that could just as easily be sung by someone half Foxx's age. The lighter, looser songs — like a characteristically breezy contribution from Pharrell Williams, and a Cook Classics collaboration that immediately follows it — happen to be the most memorable of all, even though they sound like the songs that required the least amount of thought to make. [A Deluxe Edition added three bonus tracks.]