Create account Log in

Infamy

[Edit]

Download links and information about Infamy by Mobb Deep. This album was released in 2001 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap genres. It contains 17 tracks with total duration of 01:08:07 minutes.

Artist: Mobb Deep
Release date: 2001
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Rap
Tracks: 17
Duration: 01:08:07
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99
Buy on Amazon $1.26
Buy on Amazon $5.44
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Pray for Me (featuring Lil' Mo) 3:20
2. Get Away 3:40
3. Bounce 4:13
4. Clap 4:53
5. Kill That N***a (Kill That) 3:47
6. My Gats Spitting (featuring Infamous Mobb) 4:34
7. Handcuffs 3:33
8. Hey Luv (Anything) (featuring 112) 4:02
9. The Learning (Burn) (featuring Noyd) 4:15
10. Live Foul 4:23
11. Hurt N****s (Hurt) (featuring Noyd) 3:29
12. Get At Me 3:30
13. I Won't Fall 4:20
14. Crawlin 4:06
15. Nothing Like Home (featuring Little) 4:26
16. There I Go Again (featuring Ron Isley) 5:08
17. So Long 2:28

Details

[Edit]

Long considered New York's most rugged and hardcore rap group of the '90s to ever make it big, Mobb Deep finally soften up a bit on Infamy. The album is a turning point for Prodigy and Havoc — and a timely one indeed. Shortly before Infamy hit the streets, Jay-Z had blasted Mobb Deep — as well as Nas — on "Takeover," berating Prodigy in particular for being fake. Nas fired back on his Stillmatic album with the cutting song "Ether"; Mobb Deep didn't. Instead, the Queensbridge duo went about their business and released Infamy, their most accessible album yet — the sort of album many fans never would have expected. Granted, Mobb Deep still rep the street life here, as songs such as "Kill That N***a," "My Gats Spitting," and "Hurt N****s" no doubt illustrate. However, songs such as "Pray for Me," "Hey Luv (Anything)," and "There I Go Again" sent quite a different message; the first features Lil' Mo, the second 112, and the third Ron Isley — each there to smooth out Mobb Deep's rough sound. And it works, particularly in the case of the thug ballad "Hey Luv (Anything)," which garnered the most exposure the duo had yet experienced and introduced Mobb Deep to a broader audience. [The clean version of this album censors any and all moments of profanity.]