This is the first review I've seen on the album, since it has only leaked yesterday.
112 is back with their latest LP titled Pleasure and Pain with a new spirit and a new outlook on their music. They admit the group gave a lack luster effort with their 2003 release Hot and Wet. They vowed that this new album would be better than Hot and Wet and it was 112's greatest work to date.
Well, they were 1 for 2. Although Pleasure and Pain is a return to their roots with an increased number of ballads, this albums falls very short of their own and the music industries expectations. The albums begins with perhaps the album's best song "Let this Go," a pop beat with a catchy hook. Even the album's first single "You Already Know," falls at the end of the list of leading 112 singles. Repetative ballads dominate the rest of the album, with none of them having the creativitiy and inspiration that we saw in their previous albums.
The uptempo songs are the strong points of this album. Songs like Closin the Club, If I hit it, and The Way are all very catchy songs that would have any club packed.
Two tracks that did not make the cut for the album were "Come Over ft. Foxy Brown" and "Touch me, Tease you" featuring Def Jam CEO Jay-Z. Why these tracks did not make the album will remain a mystery.
112 is now 0 for 2 in their quest to produce classic R&B albums under the Def Jam label. Bad Boy needs 112, and apparently, 112 needs Bad Boy just as bad.
112 is back with their latest LP titled Pleasure and Pain with a new spirit and a new outlook on their music. They admit the group gave a lack luster effort with their 2003 release Hot and Wet. They vowed that this new album would be better than Hot and Wet and it was 112's greatest work to date.
Well, they were 1 for 2. Although Pleasure and Pain is a return to their roots with an increased number of ballads, this albums falls very short of their own and the music industries expectations. The albums begins with perhaps the album's best song "Let this Go," a pop beat with a catchy hook. Even the album's first single "You Already Know," falls at the end of the list of leading 112 singles. Repetative ballads dominate the rest of the album, with none of them having the creativitiy and inspiration that we saw in their previous albums.
The uptempo songs are the strong points of this album. Songs like Closin the Club, If I hit it, and The Way are all very catchy songs that would have any club packed.
Two tracks that did not make the cut for the album were "Come Over ft. Foxy Brown" and "Touch me, Tease you" featuring Def Jam CEO Jay-Z. Why these tracks did not make the album will remain a mystery.
112 is now 0 for 2 in their quest to produce classic R&B albums under the Def Jam label. Bad Boy needs 112, and apparently, 112 needs Bad Boy just as bad.
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