Look What You Made Me
Download links and information about Look What You Made Me by Yung Berg. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 01:04:51 minutes.
Artist: | Yung Berg |
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Release date: | 2007 |
Genre: | Hip Hop/R&B, Rap |
Tracks: | 16 |
Duration: | 01:04:51 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Intro | 2:06 |
2. | Look What You Made Me | 4:20 |
3. | Sexy Can I (With Ray J) (featuring Ray J) | 3:24 |
4. | Do That There (feat. Dude 'N Nem) | 3:50 |
5. | The Business (feat. Casha) | 4:13 |
6. | Interlude | 1:11 |
7. | Where Do We Go (feat. Twista) | 4:48 |
8. | Sexy Lady | 3:48 |
9. | One Night (feat. Trey Songz) | 3:41 |
10. | Manager (feat. Lloyd) | 3:55 |
11. | Interlude | 1:54 |
12. | If You Only Knew (feat. Casha) | 4:11 |
13. | Outerspace | 3:49 |
14. | Get Your Number (feat. Amerie) | 4:48 |
15. | Victory Lap (feat. Eve and Collie Buddz) | 10:41 |
16. | Put It On Me | 4:12 |
Details
[Edit]On Look What You Made Me, the cocksure Yung Berg repeatedly mentions Jay-Z, Biggie, and Pac, but he certainly won't be mistaken for any of them. He apes Jay-Z's delivery quite a bit but his swagger and style is more Nelly and when it comes to lyrics, he's serviceable, not stunning. Put it this way, Look What You Made Me is his first full-length — following his Almost Famous EP by just over a year — and he's already used the word "Sexy" in the titles of two of his singles, but they were huge, hook-filled singles, both included here, surrounded by more of the same. "The Business," "Manager," "Do That There," and almost everything else that isn't marked "Interlude" would work just fine on urban radio. Add "Sexy Lady" and "Sexy Can I," plus a platinum dreams guest list that includes Ray J, Twista, Lloyd, and Eve, along with producers Rob Holladay and Mr. ColliPark, and the album is as sweet as candy, even when it's trying not to be sugary. From the confrontational album title to the cuss words, Berg is working to shake the pop tag and turn it hardcore with a baller stance that isn't so much embarrassing as it is uninteresting. The "I'm in touch with the streets"-type boasts just get in the way of the pop-rap excellence which has already earned this young artist his own imprint from Sony. If Berg stops thinking of himself as the next Jay-Z he might see what Sony sees and have a much better shot a becoming the next P. Diddy. After all, "Where Do We Go" takes an Alan Parsons sample and canes it to death, a perfectly Puffy moment if there ever was one.