Juelz Santana What The Game's Been Missing Download



Tempat streaming & download lagu terbaru tanpa ribet. Download download album what the games been missing juelz santana.mp3. What the Game's Been Missing! Juelz Santana Hip-Hop/Rap 2005 Preview SONG TIME. Intro (Juelz Santana / What the Game's Been Missing) 1. Stream What The Game's Been Missing!, a playlist by Juelz Santana from desktop or your mobile device. Now after dwelling in the shadow of his mentor Cam'ron, Juelz Santana comes fully into his own on his second album, What the Game's Been Missing!, an excellent disc of club-bangers and street parables. Both here and on his mixtapes, Santana delivers simple phrases with enough oomph to break a dinosaur rib cage. Nice end:P:P:P:P.

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What the Game's Been Missing!
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 22, 2005
GenreHip hop
Length75:57
Label
ProducerShoddy AKA Shottie, Terrence Anderson, Cliff Carlisle, Chaos & Order, Filthy, Ebonikz, Heatmakerz, DJ Infamous, Darren Joseph, J.U.S.T.I.C.E. League, DJ Nasty & LVM, Mayhem, Soul Sizzle, Streetrunner, Develop, Neo Da Matrix
Juelz Santana chronology
From Me to U
(2003)
What the Game's Been Missing!
(2005)
Back Like Cooked Crack, Pt. 3: Fiend Out!
(2006)
Singles from What the Game's Been Missing!
  1. 'Mic Check'
    Released: December 23, 2004
  2. 'There It Go (The Whistle Song)'
    Released: May 29, 2005
  3. 'Make It For Ya'
    Released: January 6, 2006
  4. 'Clockwork'
    Released: February 2006
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
HipHopDX[2]
Pitchfork Media(6.9/10)[3]
PopMatters[4]
RapReviews(6.5/10)[5]
Rolling Stone[6]
Vibe[7]
Juelz Santana What The Game

What the Game's Been Missing! is the second studio album by American rapper Juelz Santana. The album was released on November 22, 2005 under Diplomat Records and Def Jam Recordings. The album yielded the singles 'Mic Check', 'There It Go (The Whistle Song)', 'Make It Work For Ya' (feat. Lil Wayne and Young Jeezy) and 'Clockwork'.

FreeDownload

Background[edit]

In an interview with Hip Hop Canada, Juelz Santana remarked that his approach to the making of What the Game's Been Missing was different from his other albums, noting the amount of effort and work he was able to contribute to it, saying: 'I'm definitely going to say that I like this album the best mainly because I got to work on it and I got to grow with it. I took care of a lot of things on it and not to say that my other albums were not good, but I just got to put more work into the making of this one.'[8]

Originally 160 songs were recorded for the album, taking over a year to make. He described the process as 'learning how to ride a bike.' asserting to the fact that the basis of the album developed deeper into production. The album was also influenced by the 1994 film Fresh, In the song 'Lil' Boy Fresh' he loosely summarizes the story from beginning to end.[8]

Commercial performance[edit]

In the United States, What the Game's Been Missing! debuted at number nine on the Billboard 200, selling 141,000 copies in its first week.[9] As of January 3, 2006, the album has been certified Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), for selling 500,000 copies. As of October 2015 the album has sold 1,250,000 copies and gained platinum stats.[10]

JuelzBeen

Track listing[edit]

Credits adapted from the album's liner notes.[11]

No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1.'What the Game's Been Missing (Intro / Skit)'Develop2:18
2.'Rumble Young Man Rumble'
  • James
  • Clifford Brown II
  • Mike Rapp
J.U.S.T.I.C.E. League2:34
3.'Oh Yes'
  • James
  • William Garrett
The Heatmakerz3:01
4.'Shottas' (featuring Cam'ron & Sizzla)
  • James
  • Green
  • Thomas
  • LeRoy Moore
The Heatmakerz4:35
5.'Clockwork'Chaos & Order3:05
6.'Kill 'Em' (featuring Cam'ron)
  • James
  • Giles
  • Rashad Robinson
Shoddy AKA Shottie3:26
7.'This Is Me'The Ratt Pakk2:54
8.'Make It Work for You' (featuring Lil Wayne & Young Jeezy)
  • James
  • Zayes
  • Matthew Del Giorno
3:51
9.'Whatever U Wanna Call It' (featuring Hell Rell)
  • James
  • Robinson
Shoddy AKA Shottie4:10
10.'Gangsta Shit'
  • Doe Boys
  • Infamous (co.)
3:09
11.'Lil' Boy Fresh'
  • James
  • Derrick Ridley
Manti3:53
12.'Good Times'Neo Da Matrix3:29
13.'Freaky'
  • James
  • Zayes
  • Rodriguez-Diaz
2:58
14.'Murda Murda' (featuring Cam'ron)
  • James
4:04
15.'Gone'
  • James
  • Nicholas Warwar
  • Elijah Scott
  • Stephen Hacker
  • Delvin Alexander
3:58
16.'Kid Is Back'
  • James
  • Corey Redd
Soul Sizzle2:46
17.'Changes' (featuring Razah)Shoddy AKA Shottie3:51
18.'I Am Crack'
  • James
Reefa3:37
19.'There It Go (The Whistle Song)'
  • James
  • Daren Joseph
  • Terence Anderson
  • Greg Taylor
  • Carlisle Young
  • Daren Joseph
  • Terence Anderson
  • Mayhem (co).
  • Carlisle (co.)
3:00
20.'Violence' (featuring Bezel)The Heatmakerz4:14
21.'Daddy'
  • James
  • Green
  • Thomas
The Heatmakerz4:08
22.'Mic Check'Neo Da Matrix2:56

Sample credits[11]

  • 'Rumble Young Man Rumble' contains a sample of 'Never Had a Woman on My Mind (More Than a Day)', written by Mike Rapp, as performed by A-440 featuring Ted Neeley.
  • 'Oh Yes' contains a sample of 'Please Mr. Postman', written by William Garrett, Georgia Dobbins, Robert Bateman, Brian Holland, and Freddie Gorman, as performed by The Marvelettes.
  • 'Shottas' contains a sample from 'Your Love', written by Miguel Collins and LeRoy Moore, as performed by Sizzla.
  • 'Lil' Boy Fresh' contains a sample of 'I've Got To Be', written by Kathy Wakefield and Leonard Caston Jr., as performed by Eddie Kendricks.
  • 'Murda Murda' contains a sample of 'World-A-Music', written and performed by Ini Kamoze.
  • 'Kid is Back' contains interpolations of 'My Boyfriend's Back', written by Bob Feldman, Gerald Goldstein, and Richard Gottehrer.
  • 'Daddy' contains a sample of 'I Don't Want to Miss a Thing', written by Diane Warren, as performed by Aerosmith.

Charts[edit]

Weekly charts[edit]

Chart (2005)Peak
position
US Billboard 200[12]9
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[13]1

Year-end charts[edit]

Chart (2006)Position
US Billboard 200[14]94
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[15]19

Certifications[edit]

Juelz Santana What The Games Been Missing Download Free

RegionCertificationCertified units/sales
United States (RIAA)[10]Gold500,000*

*sales figures based on certification alone

References[edit]

  1. ^David Jeffries (November 22, 2005). 'What the Game's Been Missing! - Juelz Santana | Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards'. AllMusic. Retrieved June 16, 2015.
  2. ^bsims (November 21, 2005). 'Juelz Santana - What The Game's Been Missing'. HipHopDX. Retrieved June 16, 2015.
  3. ^'Juelz Santana: What the Game's Been Missing! | Album Reviews'. Pitchfork. December 8, 2005. Retrieved June 16, 2015.
  4. ^'Juelz Santana: What the Game's Been Missing! - PopMatters Music Review'. Archived from the original on January 13, 2006. Retrieved June 16, 2015.
  5. ^'Juelz Santana :: What the Game's Been Missing! :: Def Jam Recordings'. Rapreviews.com. November 29, 2005. Retrieved June 16, 2015.
  6. ^'Rolling Stone : What The Game's Been Missing! : Review'. April 23, 2006. Archived from the original on April 23, 2006. Retrieved June 16, 2015.
  7. ^Vibe - Google Livres. January 2006. Retrieved June 16, 2015.
  8. ^ ab'HipHopCanada.com :: Interview with Juelz Santana - December 11th 2005'. Archived from the original on August 17, 2007. Retrieved June 16, 2015.
  9. ^Hasty, Katie (November 30, 2005). 'SOAD Tops Album Chart For Second Time This Year'. Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. Retrieved February 8, 2009.
  10. ^ ab'American single certifications – Juelz Santana'. Recording Industry Association of America.If necessary, click Advanced, then click Format, then select Single, then click SEARCH.
  11. ^ abWhat the Game's Been Missing! (booklet). Diplomat, Def Jam. 2005.
  12. ^'Juelz Santana Chart History (Billboard 200)'. Billboard. Retrieved May 20, 2014.
  13. ^'Juelz Santana Chart History (Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums)'. Billboard. Retrieved May 20, 2014.
  14. ^'Top Billboard 200 Albums – Year-End 2006'. Billboard. Retrieved October 2, 2020.
  15. ^'Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums – Year-End 2006'. Billboard. Retrieved October 2, 2020.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=What_the_Game%27s_Been_Missing!&oldid=991648371'
What the Game's Been Missing!'s tracklist:
Intro
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Rumble Young Man Rumble
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Oh Yes
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Shottas (feat. Cam'ron & Sizzla)
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Clockwork
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Kill 'Em (feat. Cam'ron)
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This Is Me
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Make It Work for You (feat. Lil Wayne & Young Jeezy)
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Whatever U Wanna Call It (feat. Hell Rell)
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Gangsta Shit
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Lil' Boy Fresh
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Good Times
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Freaky
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Murda Murda (feat. Cam'ron)
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Gone
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Kid Is Back
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Changes (feat. Razah)
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I Am Crack
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There It Go (The Whistle Song)
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Violence (feat. Bezel)
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Daddy
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Mic Check
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What the Game's Been Missing! review

Juelz Santana What The Game's Been Missing Download

Juelz Santana comes fully into his own on his second album

Juelz Santana was introduced to most of the rap world in 2000 when Cam'ron granted him a guest spot on Double Up. Shortly after, he joined Harlem's Diplomat Set (aka Dipset) crew and made his full-length album debut with From Me to U in 2003. It took him two years to release his sophomore album, but he was hardly absent from the scene. Plenty of proper Diplomat releases and twice as many mixtapes have flooded the hood since his debut. Now after dwelling in the shadow of his mentor Cam'ron, Juelz Santana comes fully into his own on his second album, What the Game's Been Missing!, an excellent disc of club-bangers and street parables. Both here and on his mixtapes, Santana delivers simple phrases with enough oomph to break a dinosaur rib cage. He's a master minimalist who can take a single word and make a song of it. Few MCs say more with so little, and Santana compensates for what he lacks of Cam'ron's 3D-goggled imagism or Young Jeezy's raze-the-block charisma with a knotty, nunchucking delivery style.

What the Game's Been Missing! is not as guest heavy as you'd expect

On What the Game's Been Missing! Santana hits listeners from all angles. He brings the thugged-out bravado, the grimy hood narratives, the energetic club joints and of course the unique Diplomatic flavor. Dipset's in-house producers Heatmakerz provide beats for five tracks, including the blazing Oh Yes, which chops up the Marvelettes' Please Mr. Postman, and Daddy, which loops Aerosmith's I Don't Want to Miss a Thing like it was an old soul sample. The first two singles – the Jeep shakers There It Go (The Whistle Song) and Mic Check – are full of Santana's trademark brags. What the Game's Been Missing! is not as guest heavy as you'd expect, with just a few cameos, including Young Jeezy and Lil' Wayne, plus Cam'ron of course. Diplomat’s brother Cam'ron makes a big splash with his appearance on Murda Murda, a track that cops the same Ini Kamoze sample as Damian Marley's massive Welcome to Jamrock. Sizzla returns the favor by bringing the Harlem duo to Jamaica, injecting his dancehall influence on the bouncy Shottas. Juelz shines on his own though too. I Am Crack features the Harlem rapper setting the record straight on his addictive yet deadly nature over an almost rock-style beat. Tracks like Rumble Young Man Rumble and This Is Me deviate from the Dipset style and evince some originality.

Santana does prove he has something to add to the game

With the swift wit and relaxed swagger that marked his many guest appearances for Cam'ron, Harlem rapper Juelz Santana quickly established himself as the one to watch in that rapper's Dipset crew. Especially after the disappointment of Jim Jones's previous album, Juelz is helping Diplomats end on a positive note for 2005. Santana does prove he has something to add to the game on this consistently inventive sophomore release. Even at a lengthy 76 minutes long, the disc never drags. It is more mature and way more focused. Juelz spits a lot fewer meaningless bars in favor of thoughts and ideas. This album shows that dude is talented; that he’s more than catch phrases and cliches. Using his versatility, improved lyrical aptitude, and radio appeal, Santana molds the album into a diverse and entertaining listen. Plus we finally we get to see him come out from behind the Dipset banner and assert his own identity, perspective and ideas. Once Santana breaks free from his team, he will be a formidable force.

Rate review3.83