Puff Daddy The Saga Continues Rar Files

Continues
  1. Puff Daddy The Saga Continues Rar Files Download

Year: 2001 Audio Codec: FLAC (.flac) Rip: tracks+.cue Length: 01:17:29 01. The Saga Continues (P.

Dep, Black Rob & Loon) (3:52) 02. Bad Boy For Life (P. Diddy, Black Rob & Mark Curry) (4:13) 03. Toe Game (Interlude) (Black Rob & P. Diddy) (1:06) 04.

That’s Crazy (Black Rob, P. Dep) (4:07) 05. Let’s Get It (G. Diddy & Black Rob) (4:16) 06.

File Diddy - The Saga Continues.rar.torrent and other found on General Files. Press Play is a Studio Album by P. Diddy released in 2006. Puff Daddy, Sean John, Puffy, The Big Puff, and staring from lately, simply Diddy. The Saga Continues. Is Puffy's third album, although his debut, No Way Out (which featured the masterful Biggie and Busta Rhymes-featured “Victory” and “It's All About The Benjamins (Remix)”, which I still hear once a week on Sirius XM's Backspin and never fails to brighten my mood), was credited to Puff Daddy & The Family, and the follow-up, Forever, is assigned to Sean only. Diddy Feat Mario Winans - Through the Pain (2007) P. Keyshia Cole - Last Night (CDM) (2007) P. Daddy - Forever (1999).

Shiny Suit Man (P. Diddy) (1:06) 07. Diddy Featuring The Neptunes) (3:55) 08. Blast Off (G.

Dep, Mark Curry & Loon) (3:41) 09. Airport (Interlude) (0:28) 10. Roll With Me (Eightball, P. Diddy & MJG Featuring Faith Evans) (4:53) 11.

Diddy & Loon Featuring Marsha) (3:58) 12. Where’s Sean?

Puff Daddy The Saga Continues Rar Files

Diddy, Big Azz Ko, Black Rob, Kain, Loon, Mark Curry & Bristal) (5:06) 13. Child Of The Ghetto (G. Dep) (3:43) 14. Incomplete (Interlude) (P.

Puff Daddy The Saga Continues Rar Files Download

Diddy & Cheri Dennis) (0:58) 15. So Complete (Cheri Dennis) (3:37) 16. Smoke (Interlude) (P. Diddy) (0:16) 17.

Puff Daddy The Saga Continues Rar Files

Diddy, Kain, Mark Curry & Kokane) (3:59) 18. I Need A Girl (To Bella) (P. Diddy, Loon, Mario Winans, Lo & Jack) (4:12) 19. Nothing’s Gonna Stop Me Now (Interlude) (Faith Evans, Mario Winans & P. Diddy) (2:24) 20. If You Want This Money (P.

Dep & The Hoodfellaz) (4:00) 21. I Don’t Like That (Interlude) (Bristal & Mark Curry) (1:04) 22. Back For Good Now (P. Diddy, Black Rob, Loon & Cheri Dennis) (4:26) 23. Can’t Believe (Faith Evans Featuring Carl Thomas) (3:49) 24.

The Last Song (P. Diddy, Mark Curry, Big Azz Ko & Loon) (3:50) 25. Thank You (0:34) Password to the archive: hiphoplossless.

A lot happened to during the two-year gap between and. Besides the obvious name change to and his daily appearances in the news, the overdramatic rap artist saw his popularity drop considerably during those two years - a serious issue for someone as attention-hungry as. So signals to everyone that his Bad Boy empire is in fact still an empire.

'Bad Boy for Life,' the album's big, opening anthem, perhaps sums up the situation best: 'We ain't going nowhere/We can't be stopped.' It's a fairly simple claim, but this pretension towers largely over every single second of this album. Isn't just trying to make great music anymore; he's trying to reclaim his credibility. In his mission to do so, he has recruited the latest roster of Bad Boy talent, anchored by two stellar rappers, and, who are to be viewed as the successors to the departed and.

Gives these two plenty of time in the spotlight here - as much as himself - and they definitely showcase their talent commendably, as do many of the other Family members. It's nice to see stay in-house for this album rather than assembling a disparate best-of-the-best roster like he did on. This decision helps give the album more of a cohesive feel, as these Family members, and also the often daring production, make this an impressive album at times.

It's himself, though, who mars what could be a solid album with his rhetorical swagger. When he's surrounded by his crew, he's fine, though you wish he could rap as well as he can present the talent of others. Rather, it's when steps into the spotlight, particularly during the numerous interludes, that his swaggering often goes too far, teetering on the fine line between self-assurance and unintentional farce.