Future single “Backseat Action” is going to be the next big cruising song, if your system can handle the insane bass Pain employs on the song. The album besides that pretty much totally focuses on sex in some form or another.
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“Buy U A Drank” was arguably the jam of summer ‘07, with the line “We in the bed like oh whoah oh” incredibly simple and silly, but intangibly infectious, and its numerous references to other popular radio hits only add a nice sense of tongue-in-cheek to an album that isn’t even trying to take itself seriously.
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The two ‘massive’ singles from Epiphany, “Bartender” and “Buy U a Drank” are two of the best singles of the year “Bartender” a more traditional R&B song relying on a single beat throughout, but with smooth vocal performances from Pain and Akon.
#T PAIN EPIPHANY VINYL FULL#
The singles certainly show that T-Pain enjoys his mellow, R&B tunes more than anything else, and the album is full of excellent slow burners. T-Pain’s flow here is actually pretty sick, and he sounds perfectly fine without the aid of his so called crutch vocal effects. Driven by tinny drum samples and a guitar riff, it’s the most upbeat song on the album and the definition of a “club banger” that doesn’t suck. It’s so ***ing good, yo.Īs soon as the albums real opener comes in with “Church” you can tell that T-Pain isn’t some half-baked producer making a bad mix tape. Its womanizing as hell, narrow minded and completely dependent on hooks. The album is prototypical on the outset, featuring one or two skits, a good chunk of guest artists (most of which are actually just “alter egos” for T-Pain), and booming bass. On Epiphany, T-Pain showcases his many personalities, his top notch production aesthetics, and unapologetically sexual lyrical topics. Those people, of course, are the same people who heard 10 seconds of “Bartender” to come to that conclusion. Predominately made up of underground metal, punk and indie, is there room for a positive review for an artist many would assume to be the downfall of modern hip hop? T-Pain elicits strong reactions from music lovers, most finding his extreme use of vocal effects heresy to all that is good and holy, and his songs utter pop/hip hop trash. I’m hesitant to discuss Epiphany on a site like Sputnikmusic. And seriously: This album changed modern music in ways we’re still dealing with.Review Summary: T-Pain is starting to establish himself as a lasting source of entertainment in the vein of R. In the meantime, you can re-listen to Epiphany below. We expect the album to ship by mid-March. Coming on red 180gram vinyl, and 2LP, you can get the album right here, right now.
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The singer, of course, is T-Pain, and the album is Epiphany, his 2007 album featuring hits like "Buy U a Drank (Shawty Snappin')," "Bartender," and "Church." The album was never released on vinyl, until Vinyl Me, Please came along, and today, we released the first vinyl edition of the album. That album has woefully never been released on vinyl. 1, spawned multiple hit singles, and cemented Auto-Tune’s place in music history, the singer’s impact on the way music has sounded since undebatable.
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In 2007, that singer released his masterpiece, an album that entered the charts at No. In 2005, a distinct R&B singer took a piece of audio software, his incredibly buttery voice, and a whole bunch of attitude, and became one of the mid-aughts biggest pop stars so big, Jay-Z made a song about trying to kill him off.