While his 2012 effort Tomahawk Technique recast dancehall singer Sean Paul as Jamaica's leading EDM artist, 2014's Full Frequency injects some hip-hop and Marley back into the mix, and all for the better. The Marley happens to be Bob's son 'Junior Gong' Damian, a wise choice for some raw mashing it up and reclaiming reggae cred; cred which is certainly earned during their opening collaboration 'Riot,' a worthy 'Welcome to Jamrock'-styled number with a trap music break in the middle and some infectious, streetwise spirit. Equally infectious is 'Wickedest Style,' where Paul offers a woozy, cloud rap-inspired follow-up to 'Gimme the Light,' with special guest Iggy Azalea rapping in some faux Jamaican patois ('Boy, what a gwan cuz you push pon my waist'), then there's Prince Royce winding it up with Paul on the twerpy and twerking highlight 'Dangerous Ground,' while dancehall singer Konshens joins for the bright, party starter 'Want Dem All,' an electro, 'everyone in the pool!' number if ever there was one. All that said, the most miraculous winner on the album is 'Entertainment 2.0,' where four producers (Maejor Ali, SixOne, Yon Burgandy, and Chef Tone) plus three freaky guest stars (Juicy J, 2 Chainz, and Nicki Minaj) add up to a brilliant Black Eyed Peas for the 'Harlem Shake' generation. The bad news is that these highlights are neighborhooded together with a long, somewhat lesser stretch of solo Sean tracks bringing up the rear, but when it comes to purpose and power, it's a serious step up from last time out, so just hit 'shuffle' and reap the rewards.
Sample | Title/Composer | Performer | Time |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Johnny Clarke / Philip 'Hardwork' Constable / Sean Paul Henriques / Bunny Lee / Damian Marley | 03:18 | |
2 | Tauheed Epps / Brandon Green / Sean Paul Henriques / Jordan Houston / Ronald Ferebee Jr. / Onika Maraj / Tony Scales / Jovan Williams | 04:22 | |
3 | Philip 'Hardwork' Constable / Toby Gad / Maddison Grey / Sean Paul Henriques | 03:21 | |
4 | Sean Paul Henriques / Niles Hollowell-Dhar / Benjamin Levin / Garfield Spence | 03:18 | |
5 | 03:07 | ||
6 | Jason 'Jigzagula' Henriques / Sean Paul Henriques / James Foye III / Jamal Jones / Amethyst Kelly | 03:52 | |
7 | Jeremiah Bethea / Philip 'Hardwork' Constable / Jason 'Jigzagula' Henriques / Sean Paul Henriques / Geoffrey Royce Rojas | 03:48 | |
8 | Ester Dean / Mikkel Storleer Eriksen / Jason 'Jigzagula' Henriques / Sean Paul Henriques / Tor Erik Hermansen / Ricardo Johnson | 03:48 | |
9 | Shaun Anderson / Nicholas Bennett / Jason 'Jigzagula' Henriques / Sean Paul Henriques | 03:09 | |
10 | Donovan 'Vendetta' Bennett / Nicholas Bennett / Sean Paul Henriques / Sean Roberts | 03:20 | |
11 | Jason 'Jigzagula' Henriques / Sean Paul Henriques / Aliaume Thiam / Giorgio Tuinfort | 03:23 | |
12 | Fernando Garibay / Sean Paul Henriques / Amanda Warner | 03:46 | |
13 | Sean Paul Henriques / Niles Hollowell-Dhar / Benjamin Levin | 03:05 | |
14 | Joshua Coleman / Sean Paul Henriques / David Listenbee / Jordan Orvosh | 03:53 |
Sean Paul 2013 Full Frequency Riot Feat. Gong Marley Entertainment 2.0 Feat. The Great American Song Book (Volume V). Song Riot (feat. Gong Marley) Artist Sean Paul; Album Full Frequency; Licensed to YouTube. Sean Paul - Turn It Up [Full Frequency 2014] - Duration: 3:54. SALMAN 29,185 views. Download Sean Paul Fast and for Free. Come and experience your torrent treasure chest right here. Sean Paul - Full Frequency 2013 MP3 320 Maxx. 125 MB: 03/13/18: 0: 0. 1-46 of 46 torrents found for 'sean paul' Super Search. I'm new and I want to sign up. Hot Searches. 2 0 aquaman f2 hindi kannada kedarnath kgf. Free download Sean Paul - Want Dem All Feat. Konshens [m/widetide] (Sean Paul - Full Frequency) #25160 mp3 or listen online music. Log in or Register. Online Radio. Did you like the song? Share with your friends Sean Paul Sean Paul - The Trinity - 03 - Temperature.
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Sean Paul (born Sean Paul Henriques) is a reggae singer from Jamaica with African, Portuguese and Chinese roots. The musician emerged In the center of attention after a fruitful cooperation with producer Jeremy Harding resulting in the smashing hit Baby Girl recorded in 1996. The subsequent product of this partnership was an even stronger composition under the title Infiltrate. Thank to these works, Sean Paul was very quick to win domination over the Jamaican charts and get himself spotted far beyond the borders of his home soil. Until the beginning of the new millennium, the musician had been working hard on making separate singles keeping the release of the full-length record in a very long perspective. His primary goal of that time was getting the access to the wide USA public and winning a nice place at the huge local market. The streak of impressive compositions like Deport Them, Strategy, Work With It, Hot Gal Today, Woman Yuh Hot, Report To Me, and Faded established Paul’s unique style and the direction for his further development.
At the dawn of the new age, the popularity of dance music in Jamaica reached its highest point with the best people working in this genre deciding to launch a joint project fronted by a regular singer. The group was named Dutty Cup and, unsurprisingly, included Sean Paul as one of the members. The stock of the band’s songs included such big hits as Groove Me, and Jamone that became long-time favorites on numerous New York dance floors. A bit later, Sean Paul gathered himself other talented musicians and, working as a singer, recorded the song Unda Wata. The video for this track was filmed at Kingston’s most famous place, Asylum Club, and soon appeared a very popular number played by many music channels.
In 1999, with a good collection of top songs, Sean Paul arranged a large-scale concert campaign with visits to some of the European countries, Japan and The United States of America. Also, he did a nice job working with the standout musicians Mr. Vegas, and DMX, as he participated in the making of the soundtrack to Belly. The artist closed the extremely active year with the release of his long-anticipated debut album entitled Stage One. This record made his positions even stronger. In 2002, Paul went straight to American Top 10 with the composition named Gimme the Light. In May of the same year, his single Get Busy reached an even greater success topping this list. All this prepared a good springboard for the singer’s sophomore studio effort called Dutty Rock eventually selling over a million copies and winning a golden certificate. Paul’s third long player followed the glorious path of its predecessor. Called The Trinity, it arrived in 2005 and was also a very nice seller. The artist’s fans had to wait for as long as four years to see him deliver the subsequent album, Imperial Blaze, in the summer of 2009.