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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
IN TOO DEEP SHOWS THAT THE CD ITSELF ISN'T AT ALL,
By A Customer
This review is from: In Too Deep: Music From The Dimension Motion Picture (Audio CD)
one of the best soundtracks with various artist from R kelly to jagged edge a all around sweet cd with an excellent movie the best soundtrack sense house party with many slow jams and bumpin toons for just chillin or for a house party this cd is dope with Naughty by nature a sweet soundtrack
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
pretty Good,
This review is from: In Too Deep: Music From The Dimension Motion Picture (Audio CD)
got this soundtrack for R.Kelly's Use to Me spending"It's a Extended on the Classic Jam He did with Biggie.with Nokio&Jaz Ming on Board. this track is worth the soundtrack alone.50 Cent truly had flavor on here."How To Rob" is His True Classic thus far IMO.back then the cat was Rawer.there are some decent tracks on here.the Movie was Tossed, but the soundtrack is pretty Good.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
In too Deep Soundtrack,
This review is from: In Too Deep: Music From The Dimension Motion Picture (Audio CD)
The soundtrack for the 1999 Columbia movie "In too Deep" is a good one, with an assortment of Rap and R&B tracks that keep the listner entertained throughout. Executive produced by R. Spendlove and F.Fitzpatrick, with more production coming from Poke, Tone and Marc Jordan. Nas and his prodigy Nature start the soundtrack off with the title track "In too Deep" a strong track with violin background. Wu-tang members Method Man and Redman drop "Tear the Roof off" next an upbeat track. Up and coming rapper Ali Vegas drops "The Specialist" and does not dissapoint. This is followed by R Kelly track "Use to me Spending" feat. Nokio and Jaz-Ming. 50 Cent comes out hard on "How to Rob" and its surprising to see a track like this on soundtrack. 50 tears into alot of big name rappers, not the best way to make friends. All the same its entertaining. Next comes Trick Daddys "Thug Money" and Jagged Edge and J. Dupri on "Keys to the range". Mobb Deep come through on "Where Ya Heart at" and this is the nicest track on the soundtrack in my opinion. David Hollister drops a classy R&B track called "Give Me A reason" and Jill Scott follows through with a nice relaxed track called "Dreamin'". Relatively unknown teen group Imajin drops a track called "Something about Love", and Mobb Deep closes the album powerfully with "Quiet Storm" (Remix). The movie was good and so is the soundtrack. Its not amazing, but you enjoy it, and the variety of artists ranging from household hiphop names like Mobb Deep and Nas, and up and coming (at the time) artists like Ali Vegas and 50 Cent make it a good hiphop album. Same thing goes with R&B side to it R Kelly, David Hollister, Jill Scott hold it down. There are alot of bad soundtracks out these days but occasionally a decent one comes out and impresses like "In Too Deep".
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