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Faith

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Download links and information about Faith by Pop Smoke. This album was released in 2021 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap genres. It contains 20 tracks with total duration of 56:04 minutes.

Artist: Pop Smoke
Release date: 2021
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Rap
Tracks: 20
Duration: 56:04
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Songswave €1.58
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Songswave €1.90

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Good News 0:00
2. More Time 0:46
3. Tell The Vision (feat. Kanye West & Pusha T) 2:46
4. Manslaughter (feat. Rick Ross & The-Dream) 6:21
5. Bout A Million (feat. 21 Savage & 42 Dugg) 10:30
6. Brush Em (feat. Rah Swish) 13:53
7. Top Shotta (feat. Pusha T, TRAVI & Beam) (featuring The Neptunes) 16:23
8. 30 (feat. Bizzy Banks) 20:42
9. Beat The Speaker 24:30
10. Coupe 26:16
11. What's Crackin (feat. Takeoff) 28:19
12. Genius (featuring Swae Lee, Lil Tjay) 31:16
13. Mr. Jones (feat. Future) 34:44
14. Woo Baby Interlude 38:18
15. Woo Baby (feat. Chris Brown) 38:46
16. Demeanor (feat. Dua Lipa) 41:22
17. Spoiled (feat. Pharrell Williams) 44:26
18. 8-Ball (feat. Kid Cudi) 46:10
19. Back Door (feat. Quavo & Kodak Black) 49:06
20. Merci Beaucoup 53:09

Details

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On the second posthumous album from Pop Smoke, we get a glimpse of the late rapper's mindset in the period before he died and of the seemingly limitless potential of his singular voice. The second half—on songs like “Woo Baby” and “Mr. Jones”—spotlights the agile melodies he was beginning to employ; “8-Ball” introduces an especially bluesy version that summons even more possibilities. The first half, though, is where he shines with his signature style. It's especially there on songs like “30” and “Brush Em,” which feature fellow Brooklyn drill rappers Bizzy Banks and Rah Swish, and in other flashes, even as the sounds around him shift.
As with Shoot for the Stars Aim for the Moon, Faith is heavy on features in order to fill out the song fragments he left behind. This one pairs him with the likes of Kanye West, Pusha T, Rick Ross, and Pharrell as well as would-be peers like 42 Dugg, 21 Savage, and Lil Tjay. It's rarely disappointing to hear Pop doing what he did best, but it's also impossible not to wonder how he would've approached these songs had he been here—still creating, still innovating, still evolving. Nevertheless, Pop Smoke's magic lives on, even if only in frustratingly fleeting moments.