Toni Braxton - Ultimate (Deluxe Edition) (2003)

  • 24 May, 13:29
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Artist:
Title: Ultimate (Deluxe Edition)
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: Arista
Genre: R&B, Soul, Pop
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
Total Time: 1:58:16
Total Size: 835 / 275 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

Disc 1

1. Give U My Heart (feat. Babyface) (04:00)
2. Love Shoulda Brought You Home (04:51)
3. Another Sad Love Song (03:49)
4. Breathe Again (Radio Edit) (04:15)
5. Seven Whole Days (Radio Edit) [Live] (04:40)
6. You Mean the World to Me (Radio Edit) (03:59)
7. How Many Ways (04:26)
8. You're Making Me High (04:06)
9. Let It Flow (04:09)
10. Un-Break My Heart (Classic Radio Mix) (04:28)
11. I Love Me Some Him (04:36)
12. I Don't Want To (Classic Radio Mix) (04:17)
13. He Wasn't Man Enough (Radio Edit) (04:00)
14. Just Be a Man About It (Radio Edit) (04:16)
15. Hit the Freeway (feat. Loon) [Radio Version With Rap] (03:47)
16. Whatchu Need (03:38)
17. The Little Things (04:31)
18. Un-Break My Heart (Soul-Hex Anthem Radio Edit) (03:35)

Disc 2

1. Un-Break My Heart (Frankie Knuckles Franktidrama Club Mix) (08:36)
2. You're Makin' Me High (Norfside Remix) (04:18)
3. How Many Ways (R. Kelly Remix) (05:46)
4. I Don't Want To (Franktified Club Mix) (10:57)
5. Hit the Freeway (Goldtrix Full Vocal Edit) (07:17)
6. He Wasn't Man Enough (Forces Of Nature Remix) (05:50)


Most modern-day female pop singers start their careers doing their sexy, stylish dance-oriented material then settle into a career as an adult contemporary crooner. Toni Braxton didn't follow that route. She started the '90s singing elegant, refined quiet storm ballads and ended it singing sleek dance-pop tunes as she slinked around in skimpy outfits. She wasn't the only one of her peers to follow this trajectory -- Mariah Carey pretty much did the same thing, only to the extreme -- but it's a little odd to listen to Braxton evolve from the sophisticated urban contemporary crooner to oversexed R&B thrush, even if it's not a bad thing at all. One thing that elevated Braxton above her peers is that she was a controlled, powerful singer who rarely oversang, and she had a good selection of material, much of it written or co-written by Babyface. That's why her 18-track hits collection Ultimate Toni Braxton works well even through her shifts in style -- she is a confident enough performer to sell both the slow romantic ballads and material that swings harder. That's not to say that there aren't some slow spots here -- the previously unreleased cuts are no great shakes, and sometimes the abundance of slow numbers makes things sound too samey -- but she was one of the top urban soul singers of the '90s, and this is the album that illustrates why. © Stephen Thomas Erlewine


  • nilesh65
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Thank you so much for sharing!!