You probably didn’t realize the song “Nobody Speak” by Run the Jewels and DJ Shadow would be the anthem for your Monday, but thanks to the trailers for Booksmartand now Good Boys, the lyric “picture this: I’m a bag of dicks” is now looping through your brains. Like so many unruly boys movies, Good comes from producer Seth Rogen, and it stars Jacob Tremblay, Brady Noon, and Keith L. Williams as a trio of best buds trying to prove they’re more grown than they actually are by attempting to steal alcohol, accidentally stealing drugs, going to parties (presumably thrown by fellow fifth-graders), and getting in actual fistfights with frat guys. Good Boys is directed by Gene Stupnitsky, but it also looks like pure Rogen.
10 Songs That Celebrate Life at the Trailer Park. By Edward Mack 4 years. Texans know good music and 'Double-Wide Dream' is full of clever lyrics and catchy hooks. 'The Trailer Song.
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Rare is the feat that a hip-hop movie soundtrack can be explosive and feel as if it's a solid cohesive album, rather than a showcase for various artists to use throwaway tracks as cash cows. But Bad Boys II breaks both of these rules by assembling a mighty lineup that could very well be unprecedented in terms of sheer commercial star power. The album wastes no time and starts off with a one-two bang courtesy of a Neptunes-produced track featuring Pharrell, Lenny Kravitz, and P. Diddy on 'Show Me Your Soul' and Jay-Z delivering one of his most fiery vocals in ages with 'La La La.' And there's no sign of letting up from this point, with contributions from diva Beyoncé, Fat Joe, Nelly, and 50 Cent featuring a posthumous appearance by the Notorious B.I.G.Biggie's delivery is so pure and potent that it's a reminder of how significant his contribution to modern rap was, and how sorely he is missed. Things tend to slow down a bit from here, courtesy of laid-back grooves from Snoop Dogg and Foxy Brown, and Justin Timberlake doing the best white-boy imitation of D'Angelo ever with 'Love Don't Love Me.' With Puffy as executive producer and an all-star lineup like this, one would expect nothing less than a superb album that delivers the goods, and even with minor filler this steps up and is more than equal to the task.
Title/Composer | Performer | Time | Stream |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 00:12 | ||
2 | C.D. Hawkins / Lenny Kravitz / V. Jeffrey Smith / Pharrell Williams | 05:20 | |
3 | 03:54 | ||
4 | Jayson Bridges / Murphy Lee / Nelly / V. Jeffrey Smith | 04:53 | |
5 | Diddy / Dré / Fat Joe | 03:22 | |
6 | Beyoncé / Richard Frierson / Ryan Leslie | 03:08 | |
7 | The Notorious B.I.G. / 50 Cent | 03:32 | |
8 | 03:55 | ||
9 | Snoop Dogg / Loon | 04:31 | |
10 | Inga Marchand / Mario Winans | 04:22 | |
11 | 00:04 | ||
12 | Sean Combs / B. James / Anthony Nance / Justin Timberlake / Mario Winans | 04:21 | |
13 | 04:15 | ||
14 | Mary J. Blige / Sean Combs / Kamaal Fareed | 03:44 | |
15 | 00:15 | ||
16 | 04:38 | ||
17 | 00:06 | ||
18 | 04:38 |