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Foxy Brown

Disco de Foxy Brown: “Broken Silence [PA]”

Disco de Foxy Brown: “Broken Silence [PA]”
Descripción (en inglés) :
Personnel includes: Foxy Brown, Jadakiss, Capone & Noreaga, Ronald Isley, China White, Mystikal, Spragga Benz, Baby Cham, Darius, CNN, Kelis. <p>Producers include: EZ Elpee, Young Gavin, Robert "Shim" Kirkland, Lofey, Dave Kelly. <p>Engineers include: Dave Dar, Erik Steinert, David Hummel. <p>Recorded at The Hit Factory, Avatar Studios, and Electric Lady, New York, New York. <p>"Na Na Be Like" was nominated for the 2003 Grammy Awards for Female Rap Solo Performance. <p>Personnel includes: Foxy Brown, Jadakiss, Capone & Noreaga, Ronald Isley, China White, Mystikal, Spragga Benz, Baby Cham, Darius, CNN, Kelis. <p>Producers include: EZ Elpee, Young Gavin, Robert "Shim" Kirkland, Lofey, Dave Kelly. <p>Engineers include: Dave Dar, Erik Steinert, David Hummel. <p>Recorded at The Hit Factory, Avatar Studios, and Electric Lady, New York, New York. <p>"Na Na Be Like" was nominated for the 2003 Grammy Awards for Female Rap Solo Performance. <p>A little more than two years after she released her sophomore album, Foxy Brown returns with a world of experiences to talk about on BROKEN SILENCE. This album is a testament to the life the hip-hop femme fatale has lived, and it's her most truthful work to date. From the vagaries of love to life's struggles to the business of music, Brown completely opens up, detailing every last secret that has haunted her career. <p>On "A Letter," she dedicates a verse to her mother and each of her brothers, apologizing for her mistakes. Then on "730," a bouncy track produced by Loafey, Foxy speaks directly to another woman who's trying to rain on her parade. But that doesn't mean that the entire album is about heartache, as reggae-influenced songs like "Tables Will Turn," featuring Baby Cham, and "Oh Yeah," featuring Spragga Benz, introduce a new wrinkle to Brown's rapping style. She also honors her roots by paying homage to her hometown Brooklyn on "BK Anthem." <p>A little more than two years after she released her sophomore album, Foxy Brown returns with a world of experiences to talk about on BROKEN SILENCE. This album is a testament to the life the hip-hop femme fatale has lived, and it's her most truthful work to date. From the vagaries of love to life's struggles to the business of music, Brown completely opens up, detailing every last secret that has haunted her career. <p>On "A Letter," she dedicates a verse to her mother and each of her brothers, apologizing for her mistakes. Then on "730," a bouncy track produced by Loafey, Foxy speaks directly to another woman who's trying to rain on her parade. But that doesn't mean that the entire album is about heartache, as reggae-influenced songs like "Tables Will Turn," featuring Baby Cham, and "Oh Yeah," featuring Spragga Benz, introduce a new wrinkle to Brown's rapping style. She also honors her roots by paying homage to her hometown Brooklyn on "BK Anthem."
Valoración de Usuarios :
Media (4.5) :(132 votos)
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91 votos
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5 votos
Lista de temas :
1 Intro-Broken Silence
2 Fallin' - Featuring Young Gavin
3 Oh Yeah - (featuring Spragga Benz)
4 B.K. Anthem Video
5 Letter, The - (featuring Ron Isley)
6 730 Video
7 Candy (featuring Kelis)
8 Tables Will Turn - (Patois, featuring Baby Cham)
9 Hood Scriptures Video
10 Run Dem - (Patois, featuring Baby Cham)
11 'Bout My Paper - (featuring Mystikal)
12 Run Yo S*** - (featuring CNN)
13 Na Na Be Like Video
14 Gangsta Boogie Video
15 I Don't Care - (featuring Chyna Whyte)
16 So Hot - (remix, featuring Young Gavin)
17 Saddest Day - (featuring Wayne Wonder)
18 Broken Silence - (featuring Darius)
Información del disco :
Título: Broken Silence [PA]
UPC:731454883429
Formato:CD
Tipo:Performer
Género:R&B - East Coast Rap
Artista:Foxy Brown
Artistas Invitados:Jadakiss; Ronald Isley; Capone 'n' Noreaga; Mystikal; Young Gavin; Spragga Benz; Ron Isley; Kelis; Baby Cham; CNN; Chyna Whyte; Wa
Sello:Def Jam (USA)
Distribuidora:Universal Distribution
Fecha de publicación:2001/07/17
Año de publicación original:2001
Número de discos:1
Mono / Estéreo:Stereo
Estudio / Directo:Studio
brian (Long Island, NY USA) - 20 Julio 2001
13 personas de un total de 14 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- ***FOXY BROWN....The SILENCE has offically been BROKEN***

**************************** FOXY BROWN IS BACK**********************************

We haven't heard her voice in such a long time. She's been up and down at the point to almost no return, but she she's still going on strong with the release of her new, and third album "Broken Silence"

This album is definitely her best yet to come. Foxy's lyrics are so powerful and meaningfull-the tracks Broken silence and The Letter...Wow) She means everthing she says. Unlike Lil Kim and and Missy, Foxy doesn't need to feature top artists to help sale her album... FOXY is what makes this album sale. 18 complete tracks featuring mostly family and close friends is what makes the album so hot. Guest appearences stretch from Spragga benz to Young Gavin. Also Baby Cham, Darius, Kori and Wayne Wonder. This album is solid from start to finish. I never heard such a great intro and outro like the ones on this album.

Her first 2 singles "BK Anthem" and "Oh Yeah feat" are amazing. Even though BK Anthem didn't recieve as much recognition as I thought it should, her current single "Oh Yeah" is picking up the pieces. Besides these two singles I enjoy hearing

"Fallin'" feat Young Gavin, "The Letter" feat Ron Isley, "7:30," "Hood Scriptures," "Broken Silence" feat Darius and "Tables Will Turn"( Tables will turn, a track that sounds different and new...sizzling hot)

"Broken Silence" is easily one of the best records of 2001. And Foxy's like a tornado, rippin up the charst and blowing the others away. If you were never really a Foxy fan, pick up this album and soon you'll be hooked. She's the best...one of BK's finest 4 life.

Análisis de usuario - 20 Julio 2001
9 personas de un total de 10 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- **~~**~The Silence is Broken~**~~**

After the numerous car crashes, drug overdoses, suicide attempts and her public lose of love to fiancee (Kurupt of the Dogg Pound) everyone should have known Ms. Brown had enough to talk about on this album. She touches on numerous subjects on the album, but many of these subjects are ones which she touched on before including her recent fall out with Jay-Z and her never ending rivalry with rap sex pot Lil' Kim. She is said to be "unpolitical" in the sense that she address all her situations head on and doesn't back down from the constant criticism that has been aimed at her for nearly 3 years (and counting). You can call it a come back because there is no doubt about it she's back, and she's just as rugged as ever.

After her 1999 sophomore release Chyna Doll (which was considered a huge commercial disappointment), I was expecting an album that would make up for its mistake and still provide material that would make this album a success. Sure she has grown lyrically but that's about it. The reggae influenced "Oh Yeah" & the blazing hometown banger "BK Anthem" are the album's first 2 singles and they are hot as all hell. One of the album's best tracks though is "The Saddest Day" featuring guest vocals from dance hall superstar Wayne Wonder. She shows promise on the follow up single "Candy" with Neptunes producing and Kelis singing an irritating hook, but the thing that makes this track intolerable is that is EDITED. She starts off scorching on "Run Dem" but as the third verse comes around she seems to lose her fire. "Broken Silence" is a very touching track, but her attempts to become the "female 2pac" has lead her to sample his most recent work "Until the End of Time" to explain her recent drama, as does 2pac. The "The Letter" with the legendary Ronald Isley is one of the album's more personal tracks. She turns actual suicide notes written to her family into rap verses and then performs them over this piano laced beat. Her best work to date though is "7:30" (street slang for crazy) in which she address every situation dead on. In this song, she touches on her old rivalry with Lil Kim as well as her newest feud with pop rap princess Natina Reed of the group Blaque.

The real treat of the album though is her reggae tracks. She shines on "Tables Will Turn" with Baby Cham and rips up "Na Na Be Like" a re-make of her own 1999 classic from the Blue Streak soundtrack. "So Hot" another reggae track is just as hot as the title boasts, and is my personal favorite track on the album. Yet Brown's biggest misses are mistakes of her own. The addition of Kori (or Chyna White) to her record label is a huge mistake, and so is her guest cameo on the irritating "I Don't Care". She uses A LOT of Jay-Z lines through-out the album especially in "Fallin" in which she re-words one of his verses from his smash with Mya "Best of Me" (remix). She spits "the best sh*t ever written" on the haunting "Hood Scriptures" one of the albums biggest treasures, that is sure to be looked over.

Another plus is that this album is full length. Unlike typical Foxy album's she only has one interlude ("Broken Silence Intro") which really doesn't count as an interlude since she raps in the song. In this song (originally titled "Why Doesn't Everybody Just Get Off My Back") she spits an amazing 16 bars that sets the pace for the album. Basically if you've been living under a rock, Brown sums everything up in a nutshell on this track. The actual news broadcasts are thrown in here before her rap scorches the track, which is probably what makes it the best. "Run Yo Sh*t" with fellow bad boy rappers and new found friends Capone and Noreaga is the most unusual Brown song to date with a beat that can only be simply described as "Super Mario Brothers". Though Brown doesn't spit her best on this one its still worth the listen for C-N-N's appearance. Another unusual team up is Foxy and down-south screamer Mystical on the sure to blow up "Bout My Paper". Mystical's show stopping cameo is hot to death, as is Foxy's sexual approach on this one.

Overall Brown fixes a lot of the same mistakes that made her 1999 album Chyna Doll flop. She has matured and has stepped up to the throne left for her. She doesn't get to deep into the spirits and problems that surround her everyday, yet she rather brushes them off. The album is far from a disappointment, and after waiting around for two years, and fighting past numerous release date push backs I couldn't expect more. Brown really shows the reasons why she decided to come back and proves that she can hold it down (a lot better) without someone writing her rhymes for her. Bottom Line: Guaranteed Satisfaction.

Music Vibes: 4 of 5 Lyrical Vibes: 4 of 5 Album Review: 4 of 5

~*.LaDy.*~ (C~A~L~I) - 22 Agosto 2005
4 personas de un total de 4 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- She Needs Ta Come Back

I wasn't a Foxy fan when she first came out, but when I heard "Hott Spot" thats when I got into her and brought her second album & realized she was really talented & a very underrated female rapper..When she released this album I couldn't stop playin it..A lot of people seem to sleep on Foxy Brown's skills, but this gyrl is tight I just think she doesn't get promoted well which sucks..This was her best album to me "The Letter" is my number one favorite track off the album I guess cause I can relate most of what shes rappin about..She needs to hurry up & come back this tyme I hope people don't sleep on her cause Foxy is a bad chick..Buy this album

Federico (Italy) - 18 Junio 2003
3 personas de un total de 3 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Best album by a female rapper

"Broken Silence" is a CLASSIC. She writes her own lyrics (Jay-Z who used to help her is not her Clyde anymore) and she spits better than a dude. Foxy Brown will go down in history as the most underestimated female rapper, "Broken Silence" is an hip-hop masterpiece...

LilBo (b town) - 12 Agosto 2001
3 personas de un total de 3 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Silence Has Been Broken. 8/10

Foxy Boogie Brown is back finally after 2.5 years. Foxy dodges all the rumors and gives it to us from her heart. No Jigga, No Firm, just Foxy putting it down all by herself and deivering the hottest female hip hop album ever. Foxy's flow has improved a great deal sience "Chyna Doll" and Foxy has moved on and gotten rid of Jay-Z. I feel Jay-Z leaving Foxy has made her stronger and a better rapper because she learned from him that in the rap game there is no loyalty.The songs on this album are much better than "Ill NaNa" and "Chyna Doll" because Jay-Z penned most of Foxy's previous joint's but not this time. I think Foxy is much better on her own. Foxy pays homage to her roots on such songs as her hit "Oh Yeah" which has an ill beat, also on "Tables Will Turn" and "Run Dem" also on her hit "BK Anthem" she pays homage to Brooklyn.Kelis shows up on the Neptunes produced song "Candy", I feel the Neptunes beats have become steal because they use the same lame beats on every song but Foxy gives you her sexy side and tears this joint up. True Foxy fans know "NaNa Be Like" was featured on the Blue Streak soundtrack back in 1999, and one of my favorites "So Hot" was featured on Dj Clues "The Professional 2" which was released in early 2001. I am glad Foxy put both these joints on here because she pays homage to her roots and both are very good songs.I feel "The Letter" is a very deep track and Foxy laces us with reality. I feel however the chorus and Ron Isley singing it are what made this song so bad. "Bout My Paper" is another bad song and the reason is because Foxy and Mystikal do not sound well together. I think DaBrat is more on Mystikals level beauase Foxy doesn't rhyme that fast. One last song I didn't enjoy was "Gangsta Boogie" even Foxy's hot lyrics couldn't save this joint , The Neptunes ruined this one.On another note "Saddest Day" is the best track on the album and "Broken Silence" which is a remake. I like "I Don't Care" because Kori has a tight flow and a nice voice. I would definetily recommend this album to true hip hop lovers.

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