![]() You couldn’t turn on the radio, sit down in front of BET or fire up the Internet without stumbling over something new from Weezy F. There was his verse on R&B upstart Lloyd’s Street Love standout “You” and his rapper-eating turn alongside Akon, T.I., Fat Joe, Baby and Rick Ross in DJ Khaled’s “We Takin’ Over.” Wayne bolstered Fall Out Boy’s “This Ain’t A Scene…” with a gem of a mixtape verse and presented his first successful dalliance with singing croak on Playaz Circle’s “Duffle Bag Boy.” So much music, and in so many permutationsfrom harsh street grit to R&B sheen, and pop punk swagger to spacey schizoid soul. Even without a proper studio release last year, Wayne was everywhere. ![]() Think about that number a second: Few artists have ever been so prolific. What’s more, Vibe actually narrowed it down a bit to arrive at that appealing figure. In 2007, New Orleans emcee Lil Wayne put out enough musicguest spots, mixtape gold and look-the-other-way studio leaksthat Vibe magazine could run a feature highlighting the top 77 tracks he released that year.
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