![]() By the time this album was released, Debonaire had left the group and was replaced by Uzi and Madball. The album found mild success, peaking at 62 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums and 20 on the Top Heatseekers. It was released on Apfor Luke Records and was produced by JT Money, Devastator, Mike 'Fresh' McRay and Luther Campbell. This is a holding-pattern record, plain and simple. Poisonous Mentality is the second album released by rap group, Poison Clan. Even "Put Shit Pass No Ho," the album's top highlight, jacks the beat from Ice Cube's "The Nigga Ya Love to Hate" J.T.'s flow on the track even resembles Ice Cube's, showing the album's shortage of new ideas. Few tracks have the bite of Poisonous Mentality's middling moments, and the fact that it's formatted almost exactly like that album (one or two full songs broken up by minute-long jokes and interludes, for over an hour) makes it all but impossible to be compared to it. seems tired, but it's definitely apparent that he's spreading himself too thin by putting out too much material. Released a year after Poisonous Mentality, the album is little more than a continuation of its predecessor and isn't nearly as exciting. Money and company's third album for Campbell's label, is no exception. ![]() Poison Clan's most popular singles - "Dance All Night," "Shake Whatcha Mama Gave Ya" - and their affiliations with Luther Campbell have often left them pegged as Miami bass, a notion that would've been blown apart if more attention had been paid to the albums and the vast majority of songs not featuring group call-and-response vocals.
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