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Yoyoyoyoyo

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Download links and information about Yoyoyoyoyo by Spank Rock. This album was released in 2006 and it belongs to Electronica, Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Rock, Dancefloor, Dance Pop genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 41:49 minutes.

Artist: Spank Rock
Release date: 2006
Genre: Electronica, Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Rock, Dancefloor, Dance Pop
Tracks: 12
Duration: 41:49
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99
Buy on Amazon $16.57

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Backyard Betty 3:31
2. What It Look Like 3:06
3. IMC 2:33
4. Rick Rubin 3:33
5. Touch Me 3:24
6. Bump 5:19
7. Sweet Talk 4:12
8. Chilly Will 4:33
9. Far Left 3:53
10. Coke & Wet 2:10
11. Competition 3:32
12. Screwville, USA 2:03

Details

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Spank Rock appear to revel in contradictions. Rapper Naeem Juwan and production phenom XXXChange (Alex Epton) are an American group who record for the British flag-waving label Big Dada, they're practically the only underground rap group to talk about sex often (and explicitly), and their tracks accept the limitations of old-school rap and bass music, but boast an agility that makes them sound positively post-millennial. Sex is all over this record, appearing on nearly every track, from the "ass-shaking competition champ" in "Back Yard Betty" to the 50 Cent-style partying going on during "Coke & Wet." Virtually every track — notable exception: "Rick Rubin" — either references or focuses in on what you learn in anatomy and apply in life. Juwan may sound like a juvenile Q-Tip (minus the abstract rapping), but he's one of the brightest young American talents of the mid-2000s, using his voice in delightful ways (some helped along by post-production). Meanwhile, on the production end, XXXChange concocts a series of deep bass hits, digital claps, and the occasional cougar scream to recall the type of stark, echoing productions and drum programming rarely heard since the mid-'80s. It's all performed so perfectly, and informed so well by Juwan's lyrical finesse, that the vintage feel never seems like a crutch. Best of all is "Bump," where first Juwan takes a few minutes for a speed rap, then guest Amanda Blank enters halfway through, initially giving one of her stiffest Roxanne Shanté impressions but, in a heartbeat, shifting into a higher gear like a sports car blowing away the competition.