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  1. 10 nov 2008 · Reef The Lost Cauze – A Vicious Cycle with two Bonus cutz limited to 200 Units in and this is the 3 Color Vinyl! More at www.goonsgear.com Includes unlimited streaming of A Vicious Cycle via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.

  2. A Vicious Cycle is the fourth solo studio album by American rapper Reef the Lost Cauze. It was released on November 10, 2008, via Fuck You Pay Me Records/Well Done Entertainment. Recording sessions took place at The Hot Box in Philadelphia, The Dojo in Brooklyn, Heaven's Basement in Easton, Chop Shop Studio in Langhorne, The Krib and ...

    No.
    Title
    Writer(s)
    Producer(s)
    1.
    "Back at It"
    Sharif LaceyJake EigoJosh Eigo
    Eyego/Direct
    2.
    "Pay-Per-View"
    LaceyKent Hertzog
    The Beatills
    3.
    "Problem"
    LaceyJeff Davis
    Stress The White Boy
    4.
    "I Wonder"
    LaceyMarco Bruno
    • Hip Hop
  3. Explore the tracklist, credits, statistics, and more for A Vicious Cycle by Reef The Lost Cauze. Compare versions and buy on Discogs

    • (11)
    • Hip Hop
    • 8
    • 2008
  4. 13 giu 2009 · From the 2009 album "A Vicious Cycle" by Reef The Lost Cauze.

    • 3 min
    • 23,5K
    • 08gamecock
  5. Reef The Lost Cauze – A Vicious Cycle with two Bonus cutz limited to 200 Units in 2 colorways. We offer 100 Black Splatter and 100 3 Color Vinyl. Reefs fourth Album from 2008 with features by Termanology, King Magnetic, Brother Ali, Eternia, Ethel Cee and more plus dope beats by Marco Polo, Eyego/Direct, J.J. Brown, Stress The White Boy ...

    • (1)
    • 2
  6. Originale. Testo della canzone: Back at It. Hello. And welcome to, A Vicious Cycle. Please, enjoy the music... but what ever you do...: Don′t call it a comeback. "We back at it again" Don't call it a comeback. "We back at it again" Don′t call it a comeback. "We back at it again" Don't call it a comeback. "We back at it again":

  7. When you delve a little deeper into the issue it becomes evident that Reef respects rap highly. The most logical interpretation is that he's serious about the first three lines and then mocks non-rappers with the last one.