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On Top of Our Game

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Download links and information about On Top of Our Game by Dem Franchize Boyz. This album was released in 2006 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Pop genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 54:46 minutes.

Artist: Dem Franchize Boyz
Release date: 2006
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Pop
Tracks: 12
Duration: 54:46
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Buy on iTunes $9.99
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Buy on Amazon $9.49
Buy on Amazon $12.08

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. My Music (featuring Bun B) 3:44
2. I Think They Like Me (Remix) (featuring Da Brat, Bow Wow, Jermaine Dupri) 4:41
3. Ridin' Rims 5:23
4. Bricks 4 the High (featuring Jim Jones, Damon Dash) 4:54
5. You Know What It Is 3:57
6. Lean Wit It, Rock Wit It (Radio Edit) (featuring CHARLAY) 3:48
7. Freaky As She Wanna Be (featuring Trey Songz) 6:14
8. Stop Callin' Me (Edited) 4:18
9. Give Props 4:53
10. Suckas Come & Try Me 4:26
11. Don't Play With Me (featuring Three 6 Mafia) 4:31
12. They Don't Like That (Without Hidden Track) 3:57

Details

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Jermaine Dupri inherited a wasteland, tumbleweeds and all, when he became president of Virgin's urban division. One smart, early acquisition was Dem Franchize Boyz, a group from Atlanta that had some independent releases and a minor national smash ("White Tee") to its credit. A remix of "Oh I Think Dey Like Me," originally released on the group's first album for Universal, was placed on the Young, Fly & Flashy compilation, the first shot from Dupri's now-Virgin-distributed So So Def label, released during the summer of 2005. Retitled "I Think They Like Me" and bolstered by appearances from Dupri, Bow Wow, and Da Brat, the track hit number one on the R&B/hip-hop singles chart and crossed over to the mainstream chart's Top 20. The group's rise coincided with the even greater success of "Laffy Taffy," from fellow Atlanta group D4L. And then, a rivalry took shape within the "snap music" movement. D4L claimed to be the originators of a two-step dance called the "doin' it" dance, and they might've even had some weight behind their argument since "Laffy Taffy" became such a phenomenon. DFB, who thought otherwise, followed "Like Me" — a hype, relatively propulsive, and straight-ahead track — with "Lean wit It, Rock wit It," a two-stepper with finger snaps that's neither as gimmicky nor as bizarre as the D4L hit. Where D4L chose to ride the spare, left-of-center sound of "Laffy Taffy" all the way through their own album, resulting in a hollow affair (reflected by severely underwhelming sales), DFB show up with a lot more to offer. Even without the reappearance of "I Think They Like Me," the group's first So So Def/Virgin album would be durable. Though it's not without a couple inane tracks, the sinuously hypnotic "Lean wit It, Rock wit It," as well as several energizing moments — all made with booming machine beats, jolting synthesizer patterns, stabbing horns, and infections group chants — make the album a strong one. Once again, Dupri proves to be a shrewd businessman.