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    DMX-Mixtape (2010)


    2010 - 04.02

    1. DMX – Prayer (1:11)
    2. DMX – Put Em Up (2:35)
    3. DMX – I’ve Seen (Feat. JR Writer & Hell Rell) (3:59)
    4. DMX – Solid (Feat. Rampage) (3:41)
    5. DMX – Baby I’m Gunna Win (2:41)
    6. DMX – Boy Back Up (Feat. Mobb Deep) (3:19)
    7. DMX – U Ain’t Shit (Feat. Loon & G-Dep) (3:50)
    8. DMX – This Is That (Feat. Hell Rell) (2:39)
    9. DMX – Fuck That Bitch (3:10)
    10. DMX – No Where To Hide (Feat. AZ) (3:17)
    11. DMX – Lil Room (Feat. Keith Murray) (3:31)
    12. DMX – Have You Eva (2:53)

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    DMX-The Best Of DMX (2010)


    2010 - 02.19

    01.Where the Hood At
    02.It’s All Good
    03.What These Bitches Want
    04.Get at Me Dog
    05.Ruff Ryders’ Anthem
    06.What’s My Name?
    07.Party Up (Up in Here)
    08.X Gon Give It to Ya
    09.We Right Here
    10.How’s It Goin’ Down
    11.The Rain
    12.One More Road to Cross
    13.Slippin’
    14.Get It on the Floor
    15.Here We Go Again
    16.Damien
    17.Stop Being Greedy
    18.Who We Be
    19.Grand Finale

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    DMX/Ruff Ryder Discography (19 Albums/6 Singles)


    2009 - 05.05

    ruffdmx_1

    Following the deaths of Tupac Shakur and the Notorious B.I.G., DMX took over as the reigning, undisputed king of hardcore rap. He was that rare commodity: a commercial powerhouse with artistic and street credibility to spare. His rapid ascent to stardom was actually almost a decade in the making, which gave him a chance to develop the theatrical image that made him one of rap’s most distinctive personalities during his heyday. Everything about DMX was unremittingly intense, from his muscular, tattooed physique to his gruff, barking delivery, which made a perfect match for his trademark lyrical obsession with dogs. Plus, there was substance behind the style; much of his work was tied together by a fascination with the split between the sacred and the profane. He could move from spiritual anguish one minute to a narrative about the sins of the streets the next, yet keep it all part of the same complex character, sort of like a hip-hop Johnny Cash. The results were compelling enough to make DMX the first artist ever to have his first four albums enter the charts at number one. (more…)