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The Day After

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Download links and information about The Day After by Twista. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Electronica, Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Dancefloor, Dance Pop genres. It contains 15 tracks with total duration of 56:54 minutes.

Artist: Twista
Release date: 2005
Genre: Electronica, Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Dancefloor, Dance Pop
Tracks: 15
Duration: 56:54
Buy on iTunes $10.99
Buy on iTunes $10.99
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on iTunes $10.99
Buy on Amazon $10.49

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. The Day After (Featuring Syleena Johnson) 2:49
2. Check That Hoe 3:30
3. Chocolate Fe's and Redbones (Featuring Johnny P.) 3:54
4. Get It How You Live 4:01
5. Lavish (Featuring Pharrell Williams) 3:42
6. Girl Tonite (Featuring Trey Songz) 3:43
7. Do Wrong (Featuring Lil' Kim) 4:00
8. Heartbeat 2:59
9. Holding Down the Game 4:24
10. When I Get You Home (A.I.O.U. ) [Featuring Jamie Foxx & Pharrell] 4:15
11. So Lonely (Featuring Mariah Carey) 3:51
12. Had to Call (Featuring Snoop Dogg & Sleepy Eyed Jones) 3:47
13. Out Here (Featuring Juvenile & Speedknot Mobstaz) 4:03
14. I'm a Winner 4:20
15. Hit the Floor (Featuring Pitbull) 3:36

Details

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Picking up where 2004's Kamikaze left off, The Day After is heavy with R&B, slickness, and hooks. In other words, it's the kind of album the hardcore lovers of Adrenaline Rush are going to sneer at while the radio heads and clubbers go nuts for it. You could be cynical and say the album is Kamikaze all over again with Pharrell and the Neptunes replacing Kanye West for the singles, but if The Day After is a contrived attempt at going platinum again, it's an inspired one. With its smoother-than-smooth chorus courtesy of Trey Songz, "Girl Tonite" could melt the paint off the walls twice as fast as Kamikaze's "So Sexy." "When I Get You Home" with Jamie Foxx and Pharrell could be "Slow Jamz"'s little brother, but "I'm a Winner" tries a shade too hard to recapture "Overnight Celebrity"'s fire. The opening "The Day After" is the only other time the album sounds forced, as it tries to push and shove the listener into believing Twista is the same old thug he's always been. He's not, and winning tracks with Mariah Carey and Snoop, plus a successful nod to the reggaeton phenomenon with Pitbull, are arguments that he shouldn't be and that superstar collaborations are what he does best, at least for now. The thumping "Heartbeat" and the easy rolling "Chocolate Fe's and Redbones" are where the meat of the album lies, both marrying old-school Twista with new-school, platinum Twista. An album of those kind of tracks and he'd have a classic, but for now, you'll just have to settle for great singles, worthy filler, and a couple missteps.