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It's Not What You Say... It's How You Say It

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Download links and information about It's Not What You Say... It's How You Say It by Mac Dre. This album was released in 2001 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 50:39 minutes.

Artist: Mac Dre
Release date: 2001
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Rap
Tracks: 14
Duration: 50:39
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Songswave €1.43

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. The Wolf Intro (featuring The Suga Wolf Pimp) 0:52
2. Have You Eva (featuring Dee, Lil' Bruce) 3:57
3. Bleezies-N-Heem 3:42
4. Sex, Drugs, Rap... (featuring Freako) 3:51
5. Livin' It (featuring Andre Nickatina, Nick Peace) 3:38
6. So Hard 3:27
7. Iz Real (featuring Messy Marv) 2:24
8. Mac Dammit & Friends (featuring Keak Da Sneak, P. S. D, Keak Da Sneak) 3:33
9. Always Inta Somethin' (featuring Da' Unda' Dogg, J Diggs, Sleep Dank) 4:12
10. Chevs & Fords (featuring Lil' Bruce) 4:48
11. Take Yo' Panties Off (featuring Vital) 3:24
12. Mac Dre'vious (featuring Miami) 2:44
13. Hold Off (featuring Richie Rich, Miami) 4:20
14. Bonus Track (featuring Suga Free, Miami) 5:47

Details

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It’s Not What You Say… is probably the most diverse album in Mac Dre’s catalog, and it shows the Vallejo stylist drawing inspiration from the younger generation of Bay Area rappers he helped to cultivate. With Messy Marv, Dre dives into the incensed gang raps of “Iz Real,” then turns around to join Andre Nickatina and producer Nick Peace for the audacious “Livin’ It,” an astounding beat built on nothing more than the jingle of an ice cream truck. Mac Dre’s talent has always been to bridge the reality of street life with the circus of the imagination. Likewise, he has always been a bridge between tradition and innovation. One of the best things about It’s Not What You Say… is its embrace of classic, bass-oriented trunk raps. “Sex, Drugs, Rap…,” “Chevs and Fords” and “Hold Off” are as resolute and impactful as anything by Too $hort, while “So Hard” proves that Dre can still rock a beat in the most fundamental fashion. No matter what he’s doing, he always lives up to the credo of this album’s title, a philosophy epitomized by “Bleezies-N-Heem,” which turns the standard ode to intoxication into something loopy and unpredictable.