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    Sweatsuit

    Artist: Nelly
    Label: Umvd Labels
    Category: Music

    List Price: $15.98
    Buy New: $12.69
    You Save: $3.29 (21%)



    New (4) from $12.69

    Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 39 reviews

    Format: Explicit Lyrics
    Media: Vinyl
    Discs: 2

    UPC: 602498875056
    EAN: 0602498875056
    ASIN: B000BPK2B6

    Release Date: November 22, 2005
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

    Tracks:

      • Play It Off - Nelly, Pharrell Williams
      • My Place - Jagged Edge, Nelly
      • Over and Over - Tim McGraw, Nelly
      • Flap Your Wings - Nelly
      • Pretty Toes - Nelly, Jazze Pha, T.I.
      • She Don't Know My Name - Ronald Isley, Nelly, Snoop Dogg
      • Nobody Knows - Anthony Hamilton, Nelly
      • Heart of a Champion - Nelly
      • Na-Nana-Na - Nelly, Jazze Pha
      • Getcha Getcha - Nelly, St. Lunatics
      • River Don't Runnn - Murphy Lee, Stephen Marley, Nelly
      • Playa - Missy Elliott, , Mobb Deep, Nelly
      • N Dey Say - Nelly
      • Fly Away - Nelly
      • Grillz - Ali & Gipp, Nelly, Paul Wall
      • Tired - Avery Storm, Nelly
      • Nasty Girl - Avery Storm, Diddy, Jagged Edge, Nelly

    Similar Items:

      • Nellyville
      • Country Grammar
      • Suit
      • Brass Knuckles
      • Sweat

    Editorial Reviews:

    Album Description
    Sweatsuit's back y'all, and with a vengeance. This new re-release takes all the hits from Sweat and Suit, adding three more songs and loading it onto one disk. This multi-talented, multi-platinum rapper, actor, entrepreneur, and cultural icon has been on the music scene for a short time but has made a huge impact. With over 25 million albums sold and three Grammys, he's recently started his own label (Derrty Ent.) and signed a multi-year contract with Reebok that will include his own sneaker and apparel line. Sweatsuit features the bangers "Flap Your Wings, "My Place" and "Over & Over" plus the three new singles: "Tired", "Nasty Girl" (feat. Diddy, Biggie, and Jagged Edge), and the radio heater "Grillz" (feat. Paul Wall, Ali & Gipp). In addition to that, look out for the emerging hit "Fly Away".


    Customer Reviews:   Read 34 more reviews...

    2 out of 5 stars Another Greatest Hits!   December 15, 2005
    Alejandro Ramirez (Toledo, Oh. USA)
    5 out of 5 found this review helpful

    When Nelly released "Sweat" and "Suit" about a year ago, it was met with unpleasant reviews and sales. But, somehow, "Suit" tended to sell more than what "Sweat" could afford. So, to make the wrongs right again, Nelly felt that it was possible to rerelease the album and just make "one" whole album. Well, it is a little too late for that. 14 songs made the cut from both albums, which include "Over and Over", "My Place", "Heart of a Champion", and "Na-na-na". Along with these songs, are three brand new songs, including the hit single "Grillz" with Paul Wall, Big Gipp & Ali of St. Lunatics. However, even with these songs, it does not help with what has been damage already. This seems more as a "Greatest Hits" between the two albums. So, if you are debating which two albums to buy, either "Sweat" or "Suit", just buy this cd. But, if your expecting something new and exciting with this album, you will probably be disappointed.


    3 out of 5 stars This is not bad and not good...   December 28, 2005
    3 out of 3 found this review helpful

    The good things about this album are: 1. 3 brand new songs, 2. some of Nelly's best songs

    The bad things about this album are: 1. sweat had 13 songs and suit had 11 songs, couldn't he add them together and add the new songs? 2. some of the songs that aren't on sweat or suit are on other albums (nasty girl - duets:the final chapter and fly away- the longest yard sountrack). 3.he could have just released sweatsuit instead of releasing sweat and suit also 4. he likes ripping off his fans



    1 out of 5 stars pop rap do i need to say more   February 24, 2006
    Chase Kruse
    6 out of 8 found this review helpful

    It's artist like Nelly that ruion good rap called gangsta rap bringing it pop sounding...So if your like a 13 year girl or a elementary boy then you might like this cd...Im tire of this pop rap bring back the 90's sound the g funk beats with the synthnsiezer sounds and gutter rap talk...I would say 90% of rap sucks nowdays every onces in a while a few hardcore rappers that havent switch there sound bring us some good material like brotha lynch hung or spice 1 or even the dayton family so I hope this help yall stay away unless you like crap rap....


    1 out of 5 stars terrible   January 12, 2006
    Lil Flit (West Bend, WI)
    1 out of 1 found this review helpful

    The only good song is Grillz, Nelly strait up bombed on the sweitsuit cds plain and simple. Nelly sells to female fans period. He needs to get some country grammar action again. Paul Wall, ALi and Gipp saved that song Grillz.


    2 out of 5 stars SweatSuit by Nelly   January 13, 2006
    David Foskin (Waterford, Ireland)
    3 out of 4 found this review helpful

    Nelly's Sweat Suit (Universal) is the latest double Hip-Hop CD (technically) to drop since 2Pac's monumental All Eyes On Me started the trend. With few exceptions, most notably Outkast's Speakerboxxx/The Love Below, the dual disc format in popular music has served no purpose, other than to break the pockets of prepubescent idol worshippers with substantial disposable income. In a new market where savvy consumers can legally preview and download only the songs they like via services such as the itunes Music Store and Napster, Hip-Hop fans are no longer forced to buy an album, let alone two. Double albums are a tough sell. But with nearly every song on this 24-track album boasting at least one well-known guest artist, Nelly is poised to join the platinum-plus double disc club.

    Not to be outdone by Outkast's genre-bending double solo project, Sweat and Suit are being marketed as two separate Nelly albums; Sweat as the fast and dirty album for the clubs and Suit as the laid-back R&B joint. Sweat starts off with "Heart of a Champion" using a beat interpolated from "Roundball", a song better known as the theme song from the NBA Playoffs. The brief moment of nostalgia induced by the familiar melody is hampered when Nelly's meager lyrical prowess is exposed with uninspired lines like "I've been dogfightin, scratchin and clawin on every height / Tryin to make you remember me like you Remember the Titans". However, his many shortcomings as an artist can be overlooked on tracks like the Neptunes produced "Flap Your Wings". It's one of those guilty pleasures where the relentless rhythm and contagious hook displaces the need for content. The shameless use of the "panting on the hook" technique and the frequent recitation of Martin Lawrence's line "sweat drippin' all over your booody" didn't hurt either.

    The "Oh No He Didn't" moment on the Suit album goes to "Over and Over", a song for the "sensitive thugs" featuring country music singer Tim McGraw. In the years since LL Cool J's timeless classic "I Need Love", the rap ballad has taken many twists and turns. This one is a turn for the worst. The track sounds like co-producers Jayson Bridges and James Hargrove hit the demo button on their Casio. With Nelly and McGraw crooning throughout the four minute track, the song sounds like it should be on American Idol rather than a rap album. An unexpected highpoint to this otherwise bland offering is "River Don't Runn" a dubbed out departure from Nelly's typical club friendly sing along formula. With a fairly decent impersonation of a culture riddim, invigorated by Stephen Marley from the legendary first family of reggae, "River" works moderately well and is one of the best tracks on the album.

    A notable tidbit is the absence of "Tip Drill" a song that received vehement protest from women at Spelman College who were appalled by its semi-pornographic video featuring Nelly swiping a credit card down the crack of a video chick's ample posterior. But scrapping the controversial song doesn't save Sweat or Suit from its monotonous regurgitation of sex and excess. Although Nelly fans will not be disappointed, the album sounds like a hastily thrown together Top 40 compilation. Nelly lacks the charisma necessary to sustain a double CD. There is undoubtedly some material that will invigorate dance floors and have urban radio on lock for months to come, but Nelly's banal, assembly-line approach to creating music makes the overall listening experience of Sweat and Suit bland and forgettable.



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