This Is The Remix
Download links and information about This Is The Remix by Destiny'S Child. This album was released in 2002 and it belongs to Electronica, Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Rock, Dancefloor, Pop, Dance Pop genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 58:06 minutes.
Artist: | Destiny'S Child |
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Release date: | 2002 |
Genre: | Electronica, Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Rock, Dancefloor, Pop, Dance Pop |
Tracks: | 13 |
Duration: | 58:06 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | No, No, No Part 2 (featuring Wyclef Jean) (Extended Version) (featuring Barry White) | 4:01 |
2. | Emotion (The Neptunes Remix) | 4:14 |
3. | Bootylicious (Rockwilder Remix) (featuring Missy Misdemeanor Elliott) | 4:11 |
4. | Say My Name (Timbaland Remix) (featuring Static) | 5:01 |
5. | Bug A Boo (Refugee Camp Remix feat. Wyclef Jean Edited Version) (featuring Wyclef Jean) | 3:47 |
6. | Dot (The E-Poppi Mix) | 3:58 |
7. | Survivor (Remix featuring Da Brat Edited Extended Version) (featuring Da Brat) | 3:23 |
8. | Independent Women Part II (Album Version) | 3:42 |
9. | Nasty Girl (Azza's Nu Soul Mix) | 5:17 |
10. | Jumpin', Jumpin' (So So Def Remix)//Credits (Remix Extended Version) (featuring Da Brat, Lil' Bow Wow, Jermaine Dupri) | 7:16 |
11. | Bills, Bills, Bills (Maurice's Xclusive Livegig Mix Edit) | 3:22 |
12. | So Good (Maurice's Soul Remix Edit) | 4:58 |
13. | Heard A Word (Album Version) (featuring Michelle Williams) | 4:56 |
Details
[Edit]Striking while the iron is hot, Destiny's Child presents its third full-length release in less than a year, following Survivor (May 2001) and 8 Days of Christmas (October 2001). An album of remixes is a profit-taking exercise by definition, but one needs only to gaze back a few weeks from this disc's release to Jennifer Lopez's J to the L-O! The Remixes, which went straight in at number one, to see that the profits can be considerable. And in this case, they deserve to be. Destiny's Child ascended to superstar status in 1999-2000 behind a series of well-produced number one hits that gave them the opportunity to trumpet female self-assertion in a material world. In contrast to TLC, the more street-savvy girl group whose niche they usurped, they were a triumph of packaging over musical substance, an appropriate focus at a time when teen pop was ascendant. At first glance, This Is the Remix does not retreat from that stance; the singers appear on the cover applying makeup. And certainly the album is all about packaging — actually, repackaging. Typically, the word "remix" is far too modest to describe what such knob twiddlers as the Neptunes, Rockwilder, and Timbaland have undertaken. Retaining only the barest bones of the original recordings, if that, they have built wholly new musical tracks and brought in a bevy of guests, including Wyclef Jean, Da Brat, Jermaine Dupri, and Lil Bow Wow, and for the most part the results are all to the good. Fans may buy this album thinking of it as a de facto greatest-hits set, but if so they will be surprised to find that, for example, Rockwilder's take on "Bootylicious" sounds almost nothing like the version they heard on the radio. And these versions aren't only different; usually, they're better than the originals.