
Pray IV Reign is the fourth studio album by American hip hop rapper Jim Jones, released on March 24, 2009, under E1 Music, Columbia Records, Sony Music Entertainment, Ether Boy Records, Splash Records and BG Records.[1] The album, his first not to be released under Diplomat Records, also serves as his first under a major record label. The album includes production from Ron Browz, Chink Santana, No I.D., Ryan Leslie, Michael Crawford, Triple-A and Young Seph. Jones' fourth album also features guest appearances from Ron Browz, Juelz Santana, NOE, Mel Matrix, Rell, Ludacris, Ryan Leslie, Chink Santana, Bree-Beauty, Starr, Rowana and Oshy. Track listing No. Title Writer(s) Producer(s) Length 1. "Intro" (featuring Starr) Andre Parker, Aqueelah McCummings, Ernest Wilson, Gene McDaniels, Joseph Jones No I.D., Chink Santana (co.) 5:14 2. "Pulling Me Back" (featuring Chink Santana) Charles Bobino III, Demetri Duncan, Dexter Randall, Jones, Parker TrackSlayerz, Chink Santana (co.) 3:45 3. "Let It Out" Dave West, Jones Supa Dave West 4:08 4. "How to Be a Boss" (featuring Ludacris and NOE) Duane Bridgeford, Christopher Bridges, Jones, Rondell Turner Ron Browz 5:07 5. "Medicine" (featuring NOE and Chink Santana) Bridgeford, Jones, Parker Chink Santana 5:36 6. "Frienemies" Ernest Isley, Christopher Jasper, Jones, Marvin Isley, O'Kelly Isley, Parker, Ronald Isley, Rudolph Isley Chink Santana 4:16 7. "Precious" (featuring Ryan Leslie) Anthony Leslie, Jones, Parker Ryan Leslie 4:10 8. "Blow the Bank" (featuring Oshy and Starr) Jones, Michael Crawford, Thomas Byrd Magnedo7 3:46 9. "This Is for My Bitches" (featuring Oshy) Byrd, Jones, Ronald Ferebee, Jr. Young Yonny 3:44 10. "Girlfriend" (featuring Juelz Santana and Oshy) Bridgeford, Byrd, Jones, LaRon James, Parker Chink Santana 4:51 11. "This Is the Life" (featuring Starr) Bridgeford, Charles King, McCummings, Jones, Andre Atkins, Michael Floyd Triple-A 4:18 12. "My My My" (featuring Rawana) Ayinde Thomas, Jones, Teraike Crawford Chris Styles, Cylla, Dangerous LLC 4:28 13. "Pop Off" (featuring NOE and Mel Matrix) Bridgeford, Jones, Joseph Holmes Young Seph 4:12 14. "Pop Champagne" (with Ron Browz featuring Juelz Santana) James, Jones, Turner Ron Browz 3:35 15. "Rain" (featuring Rell, NOE, and Starr) Bridgeford, Gerrell Gaddis, Jones, Turner Ron Browz 5:33 16. "Na Na Nana Na Na" (featuring Bree-Beauty) Bridgeford, Brittney Taylor, Jed Cappelli, Jones, Matthew Friedman ILLFONICS 3:59 Japan bonus tracks No. Title Writer(s) Producer(s) Length 17. "Uptown" (featuring Rell) Jones Chink Santana 4:29 18. "The Good Stuff" (featuring Mel Matrix) Jones Ron Browz 3:56 Leftover tracks "Trippin" (featuring Laylee) "Shorty" (featuring NOE and Rell) "Religion" "Fast Money" (featuring Mel Matrix and Sandman) "My Life" (featuring Chink Santana and NOE) "Catch Up" (featuring Oshy) "Jackin' Swagga from Us" (featuring Lil Wayne, NOE, and Twista) Sample credits "Intro" contains a interpolations from the composition of "Sunday and Sister Jones", taken from Quiet Fire, written by Gene McDaniels, as performed by Roberta Flack. "Frienemies" contains an interpolations from the composition of "Ballad for the Fallen Soldier" as performed by The Isley Brothers. The instrumental for "This Is the Life" was originally used by Yung Berg and Ray J on a song, titled "Exotic". "Jackin' Swagga from Us" contains a sampling elements from "Paper Planes" as performed by M.I.A., and is an alternative version of "Swagga Like Us", a collaborative song of T.I. and Jay-Z (featuring Lil Wayne and Kanye West), taken from T.I.'s album, Paper Trail (2008).