![]() ![]() I wanted to make a song for those folks.” “Whole conversations begin with some guy buying a young lady a drink. “Basically, these days lots of people begin their relationships in the clubs,” explains T-Pain. “Of course, all of them weren’t the hottest, but creatively I felt truly inspired when working on these tracks.”īorrowing from four different snap records to create one hot track, “Buy U a Drank” manages to simultaneously clubcentric and romantic without being straight-up nasty. “I recorded over forty songs in six months,” he says. Personal without being pretentious, Epiphany offers the listener a variety of musical styles that ranges from the snappin’ first single “Buy U a Drank” (featuring Yung Joc) to the rebel reggae furor of “Shotz” to the deep message of “Suicide.” Indeed, with each song we can only marvel had the proficiency that T-Pain has developed, both on the mic and behinds the boards. On the first album I recorded what I thought people wanted to hear, this time it was about me being an artist.” “To be blunt, I had to learn to stop being lazy in the studio. “There has been a growth inside of me since I made that first album,” states T-Pain, reflecting on the time he spent working on his latest project. It's not the shake-that-ass song or 'Let's go in the backroom.' It's a song that's appreciating strippers.” Well on his way to a brilliant career, T-Pain sold a combined five million ring-tones of “Stripper” and “Sprung.”Ĭoming back strong in 2007, T-Pain has been hard at work constructing his sophomore joint Epiphany. "There's finally a song about strippers that ain't degrading. As T-Pain told MTV.com: "Dancers love ," he professed. While some compared the laidback electro with the best of the late Roger Troutman of the group Zapp, it was obvious that T-Pain was on a different level of creativity than his contemporaries.įollowed by the enticing second single “I’m N Luv (Wit A Stripper). “…with his acoustic guitar and Vocoder-laced vocals suggest a hurt that no exotic dancer can cure,” wrote critic Chris Ryan in Spin magazine. Incorporating a soaring chorus, soulful handclaps and 808 grooves, his first single “I’m Sprung” (2005) detailed the maddening joy of finding a new love. “I know it might sound corny, but I wanted to try and make something different.” After doing an unofficial remix of Akon’s “Locked Up,” the African sensation signed T-Pain to his Konvict Music imprint. “I just got tired of turning on the radio and everything just sounding the same,” remarks the Tallahassee, Florida native whose government name is Faheem Najm. As a former microphone fiend who was down with the rap pack known as the Nappy Headz, a five-man group who had moderate success with “Robbery” in the early 2000’s, T-Pain was tired of the borders that divides hip-hop and soul, especially since he was excellent at both. In the winter of 2005, southern soulster T-Pain burst on the rhythmic scene with his debut Rappa Ternt Sanga and things just ain’t been the same.
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