Track Listing 1. Winding On Me - (featuring Ron Browz/Lil Wayne) 2. Joey Don't Do It 3. One 4. Aloha - (featuring Pleasure P/Rico Love) 5. Put Ya In Da Game 6. Congratulations - (featuring Rico Love) 7. Porn Star - (featuring Lil Kim) 8. Cupcake 9. Ice Cream - (featuring Raekwon) 10. Okay Okay 11. Blackout - (featuring Rob Cash/Swizz Beatz) 12. Music
| Details | | Contributing Artists: | Lil Kim, Lil Wayne, Pleasure P, Raekwon, Rico Love, Rob Cash, Ron Browz, Swizz Beatz | | Producer: | Jim Jonsin, Raw Uncut, Ron Browz, Shife, The Incredibles, The Streetrunnerz | | Distributor: | EMI Music Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Recording information: Panic Room Studios, Miami, FL; On Beat Studios, West Palm Beach, FL; Chalice Studios, Los Angeles, CA; Academy Studios, NJ; Midnight Blue Studios, Miami, FL; N-Music Studios, Miami, FL; Chugn King Studios; Circle House Studios, Miami, FL. The sequel to his star-studded breakthrough album of 2001, Fat Joe's JEALOUS ONES STILL ENVY (J.O.S.E. 2) uses the same formula to almost the same effect. The "Porn Star," "Cupcake," "Ice Cream" sequence of tracks is the big tip-off that this is a more singles-geared release for the rapper with the high-profile collaborations stacked as high as the hooks and slick production running the show. The Akon feature "One," plus "Aloha" with Pleasure P and Rico Love, are empty-headed, fun weekend numbers with choruses that stick in the head. "Porn Star" with Lil' Kim is the naughty club cut you'd expect, and even if the T-Pain cut, "Put Ya in Da Game," is the textbook definition of "predictable," Joe's swagger here fits perfectly with the top-hatted one's ultra-polished production. The only big surprise comes right up front as producer Ron Browz gives "Winding on Me" a slowly slithering bassline, creating a wonderfully bizarre backing track for Joe and Lil Wayne's strip club stories ("She got it in the front/I took a step back"). The track list is right-sized and the rhymes are amusing the whole way through, making the title the only thing left to gripe about. The album is actually capping off a trilogy that started with 1995's JEALOUS ONE'S ENVY, meaning this is a sequel to a sequel and would be legitimate with "still" or "3" in the title.
Editorial Reviews Joe's M-I-Yayo influence is eventually felt, on the breezy 'Congratulations' and the Fabolous collaboration 'Here We Go.' XXL
[T]he Bronx-bred rapper again proves that he's got a knack for infectious beats. Billboard
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