Make Money By Any Means Man Down Many Men Many Men (Wish Death) Material Girl 2000 Mind Playing Tricks Money Test More That Meets The Eye Movin' on Up Movin on Up Murder One My Crown My Gun Go Off My Toy Soldiers Nah, Nah. Ay yo man, damn what's taking homie so long son? 50, calm down, here he comeĢ93 50 Cent dalszöveg (21 50 Cent album) ABC sorrendben, keresővel a dalszöveg.hu-n.
Many Men Man we gotta go get something to eat man. Előadó: 50 Cent Album: Get Rich or Die Tryin' (2003) Fordítások: Horvát #1, #2 Reklám.
Fordítás: gemini7Sky Videó: sajá 50 Cent - Many Men. Ahh! son, pull up! pull up! Many men, wish death upon me Blood in my eye dawg and I can't see I'm trying to be what I'm destined to be And niggaz trying to take my life away I put a hole in nigga for fucking with me My back on the wall, now you gon' see Better watch how you talk, when you talk about me Cause. In the end, Curtis is entertaining but only impressive in that 50 can run in place and still be on top.Home 50 cent many men magyarul 50 cent : Many Men dalszöveg - Zeneszöveg As far as Dre rapping on "Come & Go," he's got two lines, and as far as controversy, "Fully Loaded Clip" flippantly drops some big names for the sake of mischief while "Man Down" is censored no matter what version you buy, since Interscope isn't so keen on cop-killing lyrics. The third killer verse on the full-length is much too foul to repeat and comes from Eminem, who also produces the great "Peep Show" and makes 50 sound hungry for a change. and 2Pac/Just ain't around." "Get a tan?/I'm already black/Get rich?/I'm already that" comes from "I Get Money," a classic "I run New York" swagger-fest in the G-Unit style. Dre production or the severe chorus from Pussycat Doll Nicole Scherzinger, but because of 50's inspired verses, one of which gives up "You can hate this/But face it/ B.I.G. Blige and 50 displaying some passionate chemistry, and "Fire," which succeeds not because of the underwhelming Dr. Also from the high-profile department and pushing a little harder is the emotional "All of Me," which finds Mary J. Same goes for both "Amusement Park," which is as empty-headed and hook-filled as "Candy Shop," and "I'll Still Kill" with Akon, which offers no surprises, just another melody that refuses to leave the head. Equally at ease is the Timbaland production "Ayo Technology" featuring Justin Timberlake, an obvious single that's "been there, done that" for all parties involved. The perfect soundtrack if 50's G-Unit empire begins opening cocktail lounges, "Follow My Lead" with lounge lizard Thicke is pure polish, a slow finger-snapper dressed up in an expensive suit that feels extremely comfortable. Referencing self-destruction would have been a gross misrepresentation of a full-length that repeatedly employs the tried-and-true 50 Cent formula - heavy hooks, macho charisma, a dash of controversy, and some sly cleverness - and features a collaboration with the ultra-suave Robin Thicke smack dab in the middle.
Second, there's the album's original title, Before I Self Destruct, a fitting caption to the moody close-up of 50 on the cover, which looks much more troubled, concerned, and intense than anything on the album sounds. First, there's the promise he made that he would outsell Kanye West - who was releasing his Graduation album the same day as Curtis - or he would retire. There are two big stories behind 50 Cent's third album, Curtis (as in real name: Curtis Jackson).