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The Day After Tomorrow

Maino  Main Performer

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Track
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1 Intro   :58
2 Never Gon' Stop Coleman/Santos 4:12
3 Make That Money Coleman/Green 2:47
4 Nino Brown Coleman/Green 4:21
5 Need a Way Out Coleman/Colon/Green 4:31
6 Unstoppable Castillo/Coleman 4:39
7 Gangstas Ain't Dead Coleman/Coleman/Gre 4:18
8 Cream Alexander/Green 4:02
9 Let It Fly Coleman 3:46
10 That Could Be Us Alexander/Campbell/ 4:17
11 A Dream [Interlude]   1:17
12 Heart Stop Coleman/McKenzie 4:35
13 Heaven for a G Coleman 4:22
14 Messiah Bush/Christian/Cole 4:23
15 Glad to Be Alive Brown/Coleman 3:32
16 Day After Tomorrow   3:55
  • Overview
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The Day After Tomorrow

Audio Compact Disc

Label: eOne

Category: Rap

The Day After Tomorrow

UPC: 099923216124

Release Date: 02/28/2012

Original Release Date: 02/28/2012

Number of Discs: 1

Tracks: [Intro, Never Gon' Stop, Make That Money, Nino Brown, Need a Way Out, Unstoppable, Gangstas Ain't Dead, Cream, Let It Fly, That Could Be Us, A Dream [Interlude], Heart Stop, Heaven for a G, Messiah, Glad to Be Alive, Day After Tomorrow]
Contributors:

David Jeffries

Like Akon, rapper Maino came to fame with a hard convict story. He then went platinum with his hit "All the Above," so on this second album, the talented, primarily autobiographical writer has to face the cold, hard truth that bottle service is less inspirational source material than doing hard time. "Make That Money" is a fine example, as this time it's "'Cuz I just went from ashy to classy/Makin' two chicks do the nasty, yeah!" rather than meaningful lyrics dealing about the soul-crushing consequences of bad decisions. Bodies twist into all sorts of positions on the clubby "Let It Fly" with Rosco Dash, and elsewhere there's plenty of T-Pain-sized partying even though the "All the Above" collaborator isn't here. While these tracks are fun enough, the meat of the album comes from songs that rewind to pre-prison, pre-fame days, as "Need a Way Out" is Maino discovering music as an outlet, while "That Could Be Us" dreams of showing off to girls after he becomes the next Biggie. There are some musical moments that recall the organic landscape of the Roots, and Maino sounds surprisingly comfortable in this setting, but with two themes pulling at the album, this is a welcome return track by track, and a bit frustrating when taken as a whole. ~ David Jeffries, Rovi

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