Bep Monkey Business Rar

2020. 2. 13. 15:59카테고리 없음

Black Eyed Peas - Albulm (2003-2009) FLACGenre: Hip-Hop, Rap 3CDs Release: 2010 FLAC Lossless 1.2 GBTracklist2003 Elephunk1. Labor Day (It's a Holiday)3. Let's Get Retarded4. Smells Like Funk7. Latin Girls8. The Boogie That Be - Black Eyed Peas, Stephens, John 411.

  1. Black Eyed Peas Monkey Business Blogspot

The Apl Song12. Where Is the Love?2005 Monkey Business1. Pump It 3:332.

Don't Phunk With My Heart 4:003. My Style 4:284. Don't Lie 3:395.

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Black Eyed Peas Monkey Business Blogspot

My Humps 5:276. Like That 4:357. Dum Diddly 4:198. Feel It 4:199. Gone Going 3:1410.

They Don't Want Music 6:4711. Disco Club 3:4812. Bebot 3:3013. Ba Bump 3:5714.

Audio Delite at Low Fidelity 5:2915. Union2009 E.N.D. (Energy Never Dies)1. Boom Boom Pow 4:112.

Rock That Body 4:293. Meet Me Halfway 4:444. Imma Be 4:175. I Gotta Feeling 4:496. Missing You 4:348.

Ring-A-Ling 4:339. Party All The Time 4:4310. Out Of My Head 3:5211. Electric City 4:0812. Showdown 4:2713.

Now Generation 4:0614. One Tribe 4:4015. Rockin To The Beat 3:46. DownloadBlack Eyed Peas - Elephunk.part1.rarBlack Eyed Peas - Elephunk.part2.rarBlack Eyed Peas - Elephunk.part3.rarBlack Eyed Peas - Elephunk.part4.rarBlack Eyed Peas - Elephunk.part5.rarBlack Eyed Peas - Monkey Business.part1.rarBlack Eyed Peas - Monkey Business.part2.rarBlack Eyed Peas - Monkey Business.part3.rarBlack Eyed Peas - Monkey Business.part4.rarBlack Eyed Peas - Monkey Business.part5.rarBlack Eyed Peas - Monkey Business.part6.rarBlack Eyed Peas - E.N.D. (Energy Never Dies).part1.rarBlack Eyed Peas - E.N.D. (Energy Never Dies).part2.rarBlack Eyed Peas - E.N.D. (Energy Never Dies).part3.rarBlack Eyed Peas - E.N.D.

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“Black Eyed Peas represent sellin’ out,” Taboo proclaims at the end of “LikeThat,” the sixth track on the Peas’ latest album, Monkey Business. Ofcourse, selling out isn’t exactly something you want to be bragging about,especially if your longtime fans are accusing you of doing just that afterwatching you pop up all over TV screens and halftime shows for more than a year.But on Monkey Business, a 15-song gem that refuses to fit into any onegenre, it’s clear that the Black Eyed Peas don’t really care what the nay-sayershave to say. If people claim their brand of hip-hop/pop/funk/rock, firstintroduced on 2003’s commercial giant Elephunk, represents selling out,fine, they’ll play along.

Why shouldn’t they? The Peas, after all, know thetruth: they haven’t sold out – they’ve evolved.The primary complaint from all those old-school BEP fans is that, while themusic featured on 1998’s Behind the Front and 2000’s Bridging the Gaphad a strong rap and hip-hop flavor, Elephunk, and now Monkey Business,have migrated more toward the pop realm.

Well, they’re right. But at the sametime, the seeds for Elephunk and Monkey Business were unmistakablyplanted on the Peas’ first two albums. They’ve always been tough to categorize,mixing heavy doses of funk and reggae into their early work, and thatexperimentation has naturally progressed over time, leaving us with MonkeyBusiness.Eclectic, diversified and a hell of a lot of fun, the beats laid down on thisdisc could keep a club hopping till dawn breaks. A killer sample of surf-guitarking Dick Dale’s classic “Misirlou” kicks the album off in fifth gear, with amariachi trumpet backing some typically effusive Peas lyrics that get right downto business: “Niggas wanna hate on us/Niggas be envious/And I know why theyhatin’ on us/‘Cause our style’s so fabulous.” “Don’t Phunk With My Heart,” adeclaration of fidelity that’ll be blasting throughout dance clubs all summer,is enjoyable enough, but a questionable choice as the album’s first single,considering all the other tracks there were to choose from.

And while the cameofrom Justin Timberlake on the funky “My Style” only adds fuel to the “sellout”fire, try listening to the song without bobbing your head and singing along withBritney’s ex on the chorus. Then there’s “Don’t Lie,” a song that deserves to beplayed with the volume cranked and the car windows wide open. And if you like“Don’t Lie,” you’ll love “Gone Going” which, like “Don’t Lie,” opens with somecatchy acoustic guitar pluckings and boasts a perfect sample of Jack Johnson’s“Gone.”The only misstep is the final cut, “Union,” this album’s “Where is the Love,”which includes some vocals from Sting. While the song’s heart is in the rightplace – “Let’s live in unison/Calling every citizen” – it feels forced andgimmicky, sentiments the sellout crowd would no doubt agree with. But even forthe disillusioned, there’s the aforementioned “Like That,” which could’ve beenplucked from either of the Peas’ first two albums.

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Featuring silky smooth guestrhymes from C-Lo, John Legend, Talib Kweli and, most notably, Q-Tip, “Like That”contends for the album’s best song, which suggests that the old-schoolers mayhave a point. Of course, this is as close as the Peas ever get to a straight rapsong, so if you want a rap album, pick up Fitty Cent’s latest.If, however, you’re looking for something that spans the music spectrum, thatdares to go in one distinct direction on one song and then the completelyopposite direction on the next, you’ll want to give Monkey Business yourfull attention. There’s nothing particularly innovative here, but what sets thislatest Black Eyed Peas release apart is that, while there are other artistsdoing songs just like “Pump It, “Don’t Lie” and “Like That,” nobody’s doing iton one album.

Does that mean the Black Eyed Peas have sold out? They’reobviously much richer today than they were before they made Elephunk. Oneof the definitions for the word “sellout” is “a betrayal,” and it’s safe to saythat many former Peas fans will feel even more betrayed when they listen toMonkey Business. The rest of us will just keep bobbing our heads along withthese sensational beats.