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Track Listing 1. Intro, The - (skit) 2. Make It Hot 3. Hip Hop 4. Hey Lover 5. Doin It 6. Life as... 7. I Shot Ya 8. Mr. Smith 9. No Airplay 10. Loungin 11. Hollis in Hollywood 12. God Bless 13. Get da Drop on 'Em 14. Prelude - (skit) 15. I Shot Ya - (remix)
Album Notes Personnel: LL Cool J, Foxy Brown, Fat Joe, Keith Murray, Prodigy, LeShaun (rap vocals); Boyz II Men, Terri & Monica (vocals); TrackMasters, Rashad Smith (various instruments); Eric Cody (keyboards); Sonya Magett (background vocals). Producers: Tone, Rashad Smith, Easy Mo Bee, ChySkillz, Chad "Dr. Ceuss" Elliot. Engineers include: Paul Lanni, Mario Rodriguez, George Karras. "Hey Lover" won the 1997 Grammy Award for Best Rap Solo Performance. MR. SMITH was nominated for the 1997 Grammy for Best Rap Album. While many of rap music's old-school artists have suffered a downfall, Def Jam's first recording artist, LL Cool J, has remained at the top of the list of successful, surviving MCs. His Lady-Lovin' personality and party-rocking rhyming style are only two reasons for the platinum success of his sixth album, MR. SMITH. Call it a comeback. MR. SMITH recalls several moments of 1990's MAMA SAID KNOCK YOU OUT in both its smoothed-out and hard-core hits--the two sides of LL's hip-hop persona. The album's lead-off single, "Hey Lover," features harmonized crooning from Boyz II Men, and once again crowns LL as the king of the rap ballad. Likewise, on "Doin' It," he gets vocally soft and intimate for a duet with LeShaun. But the album features its tough moments as well, particularly when Keith Murray, Mobb Deep's Prodigy and others add their street flavor to a remix of the headbanger track, "I Shot Ya."
Industry Reviews 6 (out of 10) - ...LL is in a rare and honorable class, considering he can still come with tight jams after 11 years....the overall production is worth your time... Rap Pages (01/01/1996)
3 Stars (out of 5) - ...neither radical nor fashionable, but always robust...gripping and authorative... Q (02/01/1996)
...while his cutting-edge days are well behind him, this is far from the self-parodying effort we had every reason to expect. - Rating: B Entertainment Weekly (12/08/1995)
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