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CrazyNDaLazDayz

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Download links and information about CrazyNDaLazDayz by Tear Da Club Up Thugs. This album was released in 1999 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap genres. It contains 24 tracks with total duration of 01:14:26 minutes.

Artist: Tear Da Club Up Thugs
Release date: 1999
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Rap
Tracks: 24
Duration: 01:14:26
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $11.99
Buy on Amazon $18.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Dalazdayz 1:05
2. Who the Crunkest (feat. Project Pat) 5:14
3. Smoked Out (feat. Twista) 4:00
4. I'm Losing It 2:06
5. Throw Your Sets (feat. Crucial Conflict) 4:55
6. Undercover Freaks (feat. Too Short & T-Rock) 3:24
7. Wet Party (feat. Spice 1 & M-Child) 3:55
8. Elbow a N***a (feat. Project Pat) 3:27
9. Hell Naw 3:04
10. Get Buck, Get Wild (feat. Crunchy Black) 4:20
11. On Da Block (Skit) 0:31
12. What You Lookin' For (feat. Project Pat) 3:21
13. Paper Chase (feat. Fatal) 3:11
14. Hypnotize Cash Money (feat. Hot Boyz, Juvenile, BG & Big Tymers) 4:52
15. When God Calls Time Out 2:04
16. Big Business 3:55
17. When It's on It's Murder (Skit) 0:31
18. Push 'Em Off 4:31
19. Slob on My Knob 2:00
20. All Dirty Hoes (feat. Gangsta Boo) 3:22
21. Triple Six Clubhouse 2:46
22. A N***a's Worst Downfall 3:30
23. Hypnotize Minds/Prophet Posse (feat. Three 6 Mafia) 3:56
24. Comin' Up Next 0:26

Details

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Tear Da Club Up Thugs' debut album, Crazyndalazdayz, represents the rowdiest side of Three 6 Mafia, both in terms of beats as well as rhymes. Most of the songs have blatant references to riot-inciting violence, particularly songs such as "Get Buck, Get Wild" and "Elbow a N***a." And when the rappers aren't trying to lyrically start fights, they're most likely spouting misogynist rants in songs such as "Slob on My Knob" and "All Dirty Hoes." So when you really sit down and think about it, this music appeals to the most primal male instincts. Furthermore, the up-tempo, hard-hitting beats only further evoke base feelings. So if you have a taste for rowdy music, this is about as rousing as music can get. In terms of cast, the album features a wide range of rappers, including everyone from the Three 6 Mafia camp, as well as guests such as Spice 1 and Too $hort. Yet just as Prophet Posse focused almost exclusively on the horror side of Three 6 Mafia, Tear Da Club Up Thugs focuses almost exclusively on their violent side — making the two groups quite similar, in fact. Yet this one-dimensional slant proves limiting over the course of an entire album, a problem that plagued Prophet Posse's Body Parts album as well as this one. Where Three 6 Mafia's better albums present a wide range of variety in terms of both lyrical content as well as beats, this album is nothing but rowdy up-tempo calls to violence. That's wonderful if that's all you're looking for, but, for most, this will prove a bit too redundant to be truly effective.