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List of Ja Rule albums

Ja Rule Album - The Last Temptation

Ja Rule Album - The Last Temptation (Front side)
Album Information :
Customers rating: (239 ratings)
Release Date:2002-11-19
Type:Audio CD
Genre:Explicit Version, Pop, Rap & Hip-Hop, Rap, Hip-Hop, Rap/Hip Hop
Label:Def Jam
UPC:044006348728
Approx. Price:$13.98 (USD)
Track Listing :
1 . Intro
2 . Thug Lovin' feat. Bobby Brown
3 . Mesmerize feat. Ashanti
4 . Pop Niggas
5 . The Pledge Remix feat. Ashanti, Ja Rule, Nas and 2Pac
6 . Murder Reigns
7 . Last Temptation feat. Charli Baltimore
8 . Murder Me feat. Caddillac Tah and Alexi
9 . The Warning
10 . Connected feat. Eastwood and Crooked I
11 . Emerica feat. Young Life and Chink Santana
12 . Rock Star
13 . Destiny (Outro)
Review - Amazon.com :
His inexplicable top-tier popularity notwithstanding, Ja Rule has developed into something of an oddity among today's pack of commercial rappers. Murder Inc.'s eager young cash cow is an MC whose ability to sound like 2Pac conflicts with his urge to sing like Donny Hathaway, and these two seemingly disparate influences firmly butt heads. Songs like the Ashanti-accented "Mesmerize" and the downtempo "Rock Star" showcase Ja's wobbly baritone croon, while "Thug Lovin'" (featuring the authentic thug crooner, Bobby Brown) and "Murder Me" display his patented hip-hop growl. In keeping with Murder Inc.'s domination of mainstream airwaves, the vibe here is strictly midtempo R&B, aside from the exceedingly shrill synth-and-drum-machine styling of the Neptunes-laced "Pop N****s" and the prefab grimness that permeates "The Warning." Young'uns mightn't notice, but the samples utilized on The Last Temptation, including Toto's "Africa" (on "Murder Reigns") and "Funky Sensation" (on the title track), are extremely unsubtle. Those who were raised on foundation hip-hop might do better to look elsewhere. --Rebecca Levine
Customer review - 2002-12-27
- How Come You Only Rap With The Inc.?
When Jay-Z surfaced Ja Rule in 1999, you could tell he would be a big mainstream sucsess. This theory was proven correct on his debut album "Venni Vetti Vecci" which was pure thug rap. He then felt the need to change his style and guest performances from the likes of Jigga, to female artists including the likes of Ashanti. This was purely for commercial sucsess, because on the radio Ashanti is always going to come off really well. The 2000 album "Rule 3:36" was just bareable. "Pain Is Love" was played in my CD player once, and has been collecting dust on the rack ever since. "The Last Temptation" is the shortest yet and the worst yet.

I awarded it three stars becuase Ja Rule has done a good job on tracks like "Thug Lovin'" and "Murder Reigns". Other than that, he's really not bringing anything new to the rap scene. It is blataintly obvious that he bought this out so he could rack a few million so he could have an expensive Christmas. If you read the productional credits in the booklet, you'll see that a lot of samples were taken from tracks written by the likes of Ralph Saadiq. Ja Rule has falen to the level where he doesn't even write his own stuff.

It's quite insulting to major rap fans who spend almost all there money on rap, that Nas would put himself at such a questionable descion to perform with Ja, seeing as he is a rap legend. The use of 2Pac was a good idea, but Ja Rule has to face it: He's not 2Pac and he's not Biggie Smalls. Ashanti was also featured with these rap greats and is possibly the only female to cme off well on this album, besides Charlie Baltimore. I loo forward to her debut album "The Diary". Chink Santana and Alexi are really go nowhere rappers.

I won't be buying anything with Ja Rule on it until he stops the pop and goes back to rap. Don't spend your money on this please, but buy the new Snoop or Jay-Z albums. Ja Rule is just a commercial pop artist at the momment. And why wasn't Irv Gotti featured?

Customer review - 2003-03-26
- WANKSTA
I wish people would stop calling Ja Rule a wannabe Tupac because that is an insult to Tupac. Their names shouldn't even be mentioned in the same sentence. What happened to Ja? He's fallen a long way since "Holla Holla." Every single he releases now is a collaboration with some female singing about relationships. Does Ja think his fan base is stupid? Does he think no one will notice that he is just remanufacturing the same song over and over. Ja should just release an R&B album where he is singing on every track because you know that's all he wants to do. You can put Ja Rule in the same category as LL: former hard rappers who lost their street cred by trying to pass pop records off as hip-hop. ...
Customer review - 2002-12-05
- whats this...smells like fish
Ok, Ja Rule gets 1 star for being able to make so much money off such wack shiyt. Thats worth one star. The album is softer than a Hush Puppy yet Ja portrays himself as a SUPER OG x3 SUPER THUG! I would NOT recommend this CD to anyone, unless you consider Britney Spears and Justin Timberlake "hip hop". However, I must take my hat off to Ja Rule for making so much scrilla and having no musical talent whatsoever. Smart dude. I have no rapping skills either, maybe I can put out my "First Temptation" album and scream MURDA MURDA all over the tracks and sell millions! Let me get this right, Ja Rule wants ME to spend MY money, so I can listen to this garbage and make HIM rich. No way pal, I'd rather give my 15 bucks to the Salvation Army this holiday season. HOLLA HOLLA!
Customer review - 2002-11-24
- Murdaaa? - I DON'T BELIEVE YOU!
Oh no, Ja Rule wanted to do a real street sound album, but he did a real pop sound album, again! Please, it's the best time to end your career. If you wanna make a great present for christmas for the people, stop your career!
Customer review - 2002-11-28
- I WISH I WAS PAC - Ja Rule
Come on dmx I mean Pac I mean Rule...
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