Oh Boy (Don Cisco album)

Oh Boy is the second studio album by American rapper Don Cisco, released August 29, 2000 on Thump Street. It was produced by Bigg Robb, Fingazz, Fredwreck, Mall, Philly Blunt and Tone Capone. The album features guest performances by fellow Latino Velvet members: Jay Tee, Baby Beesh and Frost, as well as Mac Dre, Kurupt, Soopafly, Roscoe, Roger Troutman, B-Legit and PSD.

Oh Boy
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 29, 2000
GenreWest Coast hip hop, Gangsta rap, Rap, Chicano rap
Length73:49
LabelThump Street
ProducerBigg Robb, Fingazz, Fredwreck, Mall, Philly Blunt, Tone Capone
Don Cisco chronology
Til the Wheels Fall Off
(1998)
Oh Boy
(2000)
Hustler's Paradise
(2005)

The song, "Mamacita", was originally heard in the film Next Friday and was also released on the film's soundtrack. "Breezy" later appeared on the Latino Velvet compilation, Menudo Mix and "Pimps Get Chose" was later re-titled and re-released on the Mac Dre compilation, Appearances.

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Allmusic - "...Balancing a smooth flow with charismatic lyrics, the Latin rapper moves through a stunning number of tracks without exhausting thematic material...this album features an artist capable of going head to head with most major label MCs, along with slick, funk-influenced production. Furthermore, the straight-up Latin moments, such as the chorus to "Mamacita"—featuring the superstar line-up of Cisco, Frost, Soopafly, and Kurupt—bring a new aesthetic to hip-hop."[1]

Track listing

  1. "Born Ready" - 1:06
  2. "Oh Boy" (featuring Kurupt & Roscoe) - 4:36
  3. "Keep It to Myself" - 4:11
  4. "Long Range Pimpin" (Prelude) - 0:36
  5. "Long Range Pimpin" - 3:56
  6. "Pimps Get Chose" (featuring Mac Dre) - 3:53
  7. "Guajira" (featuring Bigg Robb & Roger Troutman) - 4:00
  8. "Just Like Mexico" (Prelude) - 0:06
  9. "Just Like Mexico" - 2:48
  10. "Mamacita" (Prelude) - 0:15
  11. "Mamacita" (featuring Frost, Soopafly & Kurupt) - 4:46
  12. "Murder After Dark" (Prelude) - 0:11
  13. "Murder After Dark" (featuring B-Legit) - 4:28
  14. "Boss Up" (featuring Dubee) - 4:23
  15. "Brainstorm" (Interlude) - 0:59
  16. "Talk That Talk" (featuring PSD) - 4:14
  17. "My Response" (Prelude) - 1:02
  18. "My Response" (featuring Miami) - 5:41
  19. "Do You Like 2 Ride?" - 5:30
  20. "Raza Park" (Interlude) - 0:36
  21. "Weekendz Freakendz" - 3:19
  22. "Breezy" (featuring Baby Beesh & Jay Tee) - 4:21
  23. "Watcha Wanna Do?" - 4:18
  24. "Oh Boy" (Radio edit) (featuring Kurupt & Roscoe) - 4:33
gollark: You're wrong then.
gollark: You do not need the brackets.
gollark: It was designed to allow variable-sized metadata blocks instead of the fixed 8192B of before, which in retrospect was not hugely useful, so the start/end are how far *after the metadata region* each thing is.
gollark: Something like `{"tracks": [{"title": "bee movie full soundtrack", "start": 0, "end": 600000}] }`, while odd-looking, is valid JSON.
gollark: All the parser implementations around should accept that as valid, and you can use a fixed amount of size.

References

  1. Birchmeier, Jason. Review: Oh Boy. Allmusic. Retrieved on 2009-10-19.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.