Year of the Gentleman is the third studio album by American recording artist Ne-Yo, released September 16, 2008, on Def Jam Recordings in the United States. Ne-Yo - Year Of The Gentlemen.zip Archive zip 0 Size 67 MB Rating 0, Like, Dislike Copy to Favorites Share Archive Content Report. Ne-Yo effortlessly does this with Year of the Gentleman. Just about every mood is covered effectively and it’s a gift that not very many possess. Just about every mood is covered effectively.
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Year of the Gentleman is the studio/Mixtape Album by artist/Rapper/DJ Ne-Yo, and Album has highlight a R&B sound. It was released/out on 2008 in English dialect, by some Music Recording Company, as the follow-up to last studio/Mixtape Album. The Album features coordinated efforts with makers, producers and guest artists and is noted for Ne-Yo experimentation with new melodic types. Year of the Gentleman was generally welcomed by critics and was designated/won distinctive awards. Ne-Yo's 2008 new Album 'Year of the Gentleman' is presently accessible for free download in mp3 320kbps lossy format with HD Cover Art and DJ/Dolby sound. The artist just dropped his latest collection Year of the Gentleman – and we have it here for you to check out! Ne-Yo's new collection includes 14 tracks on 1 disc(s) with total runtime of 56:54.
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All songs have free direct download links on high speed servers so that you will not experience any downtime, slow speed or dead links, fans can also stream the Album via Apple Music or iTunes, Google Music, Amazon Music and all other platforms.
Review Apart from a little more drama, a notion set with the desperate urgency of opening track 'Closer,' not much makes Year of the Gentleman, Ne-Yo's third album in as many years, all that different from In My Own Words or Because of You. If there are any real shake-ups in the songwriter/singer's m.o., they are subtle, not glaring, typically evident only in the production wrinkles brought by his collaborators. Had each album been separated by a few years of inactivity, this lack of change might be an issue, but since breaking out with Mario's 'Let Me Love You' in 2004, Ne-Yo has been nothing if not steady and consistent, a constant presence in the R&B chart who probably could not devise a gimmick if his career depended upon it - unless you hold those natural and often uncanny Michael Jackson vocalisms, as present as ever throughout highlight 'Nobody,' against him. What makes the album slightly less satisfying than Ne-Yo's first two albums is that the ballads are slightly sappier and overwrought. The odds are in his favor, however, that no one has written a more gorgeous song about slothful self-loathing. That song, 'Why Does She Stay,' forms the front end of a two-track patch of glorious gloom - the album's center, both literally and figuratively - complemented by 'Fade into the Background,' where he watches the one who got away get married.