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| | THE E.N.D. (Energy Never Dies) | | | Music Artist : | | Black Eyed Peas | | Music Style : | | General | | Record Label : | | Interscope | | Release Date : | | 2009-06-09 | | Store Price : | | $13.98 | | Artistopia's Price: $9.99 | | Usually ships in 24 hours | | |
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CD Tracks/Songs
Disc 11. Boom Boom Pow 2. Rock That Body 3. Meet Me Halfway 4. Imma Be 5. I Gotta Feeling 6. Alive 7. Missing You 8. Ring-A-Ling 9. Party All the Time 10. Out of My Head 11. Electric City 12. Showdown 13. Now Generation 14. One Tribe 15. Rockin to the Beat
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Other Artist Albums
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Customer Reviews of This Album/CD |
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Complete garbage Submitted on: 2009-11-20 |
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I got this CD for free when I bought DJ Hero at Target...and now I know why.
Remember when BEP made hip-hop? Yeah, it was pretty sweet. Well those days are gone apparently. This album sounds like a recording of my computer with diarrhea. Seriously. Just horrible. I am embarassed for them. |
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The E.N.D. CD Submitted on: 2009-11-18 |
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| The CD arrived ahead of schedule. It was in excellent condition and the music is great. |
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other artists Submitted on: 2009-11-16 |
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this album is ok i love there earlier work without fergie.
if you like the black eyed peas you should check out "Choz1n"
this album is hott |
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Disappointing Submitted on: 2009-11-15 |
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| Like others have said, too much audio-tone (or whateveritscalled) in this album. Just kinda feels like they phoned it in, talent-wise. Empty music with some good beats, but lyrically, boring as crap. I liked their older stuff better and I'm glad I only paid $5 for this. Save your $ and buy a few of the songs you like and toss the rest. The whole album isn't worth it. |
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Painfully Catchy Submitted on: 2009-11-08 |
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Fans of old school, politically minded Black Eyed Peas have given up on these so-called 'sell-outs' for eons, and they'll probably continue to do the same with this latest entry in the Peas discography. Fans of the bands latter albums, particularly Monkey Business, will fall in love with the band all over again with an album literally jam-packed with potential hits that mix some of the sounds of Monkey Business (in particular the sparsity of surprise hit 'My Humps') with other influences including Daft Punk, Basement Jaxx, Lil Wayne (vocoder much?), and dare I say it...90s cheese-electronica group Vengaboys.
The album, as I've pointed out several times by now, is painfully catchy. Even if the cleverness of the lyrics isn't quite as prominent as on past albums, even if you aren't a big fan of the group's jump into more dance-electronica territory, you still won't be able to get any of these songs out of your head - and that goes for virtually the whole CD. Existing singles 'Boom Boom Pow' and 'I Gotta Feeling' have already been beaten to death, and I'd expect many more to follow suit, including new single 'Meet Me Halfway' - an mix of 80s pop (you can't help but think of Madonna based on Fergie's trilling of "Right at the borderline...") and laid-back rap. "Rock That Body" - destined to be a single - borrows the most from the electronica world with a great hook and chipmunk-esque bridge. "Alive" follows in the same vein with a more upbeat, piano-based hook that feels very much like it came from Will.I.Am's solo album.
"Imma Be" and "Electric City" fits the most with today's general sparse hip hop sound (Chingy or "Drop It Like It's Hot" like). "Missing You", "Showdown", and "Ring A Ling" are both leaning towards electronica with upbeat but not-quite-as-catchy melodies, while "Party All The Time" really seems like "I Gotta Feeling Part 2" in more ways than one. "Out Of My Mind" is Fergie's token solo song, but not nearly as memorable as past entries. People looking for BEP's token social commentary will find it - lightly - on the tracks "Now Generation" (a commentary on our 'I Want It Now!' attitudes, featuring a sample of Veruca Salt of Willy Wonka fame), and the world beat-inspired "One Tribe". The album closes with "Rockin To The Beat", the most overtly Daft Punk-inspired track on the whole thing that fits with the album but probably isn't single material.
Overall this album is very representative of who Black Eyed Peas are and what their fans expect from them - extremely catchy danceable music that makes you feel good. It's missing some of the originality found on 'Elephunk' but it does represent a new (if inspired-by-others) sound for the group that will surely keep them racking up hits for years to come. Also the second bonus disc - if you can track down the deluxe edition still - has some equally fun bonus tracks and six great remixes of previous Peas' hits. Fun! |
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