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Game Time

2002 studio album by Lil' Romeo From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Game Time
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Game Time is the second studio album by American rapper Lil' Romeo. Originally scheduled for an April 16, 2002 release, it was ultimately released on December 17, 2002 on The New No Limit and Universal Records. The album peaked at number 33 on the Billboard 200 and had first week sales of 93,000 copies.

Quick Facts Studio album by Lil' Romeo, Released ...
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Critical reception

More information Review scores, Source ...

Dan LeRoy from AllMusic found the album "overlong and musically malnourished" with its track listing and overuse of lazy sampling but gave credit to Romeo's charm on songs like "True Love" and "2-Way", concluding that he should follow in the footsteps of Will Smith and go into acting instead.[1] Jon Caramanica, writing for Rolling Stone, said that Game Time "doesn't have much to recommend it, but if nothing else, Romeo has got his target demo on lock."[3] Robert Ford of Entertainment Weekly felt throughout the album that "an overabundance of samples and fluff, not to mention unskilled flow, proves Romeo is still lil’ league."[2]

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Track listing

More information No., Title ...
Sample credits
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Personnel

Adapted from the liner notes of Game Time.[5]

  • Myke Diesel – engineering, mixing (tracks 1, 2, 4-7, 11, 16, 19)
  • The Beat Boyz – engineering, mixing (tracks 3, 9, 13, 14), background vocals (track 13)
  • Carlos Stephens – engineering, mixing (tracks 8, 12, 15)
  • Anthony President – engineering, mixing (track 18)
  • Branz Dimilo – engineering, mixing (track 18)
  • Bernie Grundman – mastering
  • Chris Bellman – mastering
  • Robin Hill – sample clearance services
  • Tim Alexander – photos

Charts

More information Chart (2003), Peak position ...

References

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