Reviews by StreetsDisciple
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At the stage of writing this I have heard 3 Redman albums, (Whut-Thee Album, Muddy Waters and Malpratice) and after hearing them, this is a very disappointing album. By comparison, the production is widely not up to scratch apart from a few songs, and most tracks will get you skipping them midway through. In saying that though, some of the beats are good but they just don't make you want it for 4 minutes... They get a bit monotonous. It's still better than a lot of other releases, but I'm pretty sure anyone who has heard the best of Redman before will be disappointed with this LP. It's is just too inconsistent and doesn't really feel gel to feel like an album. VERY GOOD Put It Down Soopaman Luva 6 OKAY-GOOD Bak Inda Buildin How U Like Dat Walk In Gutta Rite Now Mr. Ice Cream Man (skit) Merry Jane Gilla House Check Soopaman Luva 6 ½ The rest of the tracks are pretty skippable. He needs Erick Sermon back for the production for most of the album on Muddy Waters 2 or whatever his next album is.
0
MY MAN HAS FINALLY MADE SOMETHING AGAIN THAT I GET THOROUGH ENJOYMENT FROM I've basically been off Kanye since 'Graduation'. '808s' is him autotuning for a whole album... No thanks. I won't go into it, but I've never gotten the obsession with 'Fantasy'. I've written a review explaining why. Minus a couple of songs, 'Yeezus' ain't my cup of tea. 'Pablo' sounds like a rushed mish-mash of ideas with few great moments. 'Ye' has nothing noteworthy. 'JESUS IS KING' has some of the most boring music Kanye has ever produced. Donda is better though. This is such an easy listen. It isn't experimental like 'Yeezus' at all. It's just good trap production with some unique sounds including gospel themes. A lot of the beats bump, Kanye is entertaining ("We off the grid, grid, grid, grid, grid"), but doesn't step over the line like he did with lyrics from the aforementioned album, and while there are many featuring verses, and Kanye goes missing at times, most work well. 'Off the Grid' is hard a nails, but would be better if Kanye just spat, particularly instead of Playboi Carti. The main issue with this is that it's 27 TRACKS long with the last four songs just being slightly different versions of what we have already heard. For someone who has had quality control with most of his projects, it's surprising that he's decided to release a near 2-hour album. Another more minor issue is the loooong speech by Larry Hoover Jr. As I play the album I have to hit skip every time that starts. He should've just put it on 'Jesus Lord pt 2' to keep pt 1 snappy. The only songs I dislike here are the annoying opener, with Syleena Johnson repeating "Donda" in different ways for 50 seconds, but that's just an intro, 'Remote Control' and Pop Smoke's 'Lord I Need You'. 'Jail' is a touch boring too with Jay-Z's verse nearly putting me to sleep. As I opened with, after not feeling Kanye for a while, this is the most I've gotten out of a project from him for ages. 'Come to Life' is so beautiful. Best Tracks: Off the Grid, Praise God, Ok Ok, Junya, Believe What I Say, Heaven and Hell, Jesus Lord, Come to Life, All the 'pt 2s' of songs I've listed.
3
Most of these songs sound fairly modern and with some of the political references to Bush, Clinton and Obama they seem to be from between 'Icons' and 'Anthem Inc' and not anything from their heyday. A couple have been released before though. 'Respect' was on 'Naughty by Nature Featuring Garden State Greats Mixtape', and 'Wifey Material', is from 2000, and was also on a recently release unofficial release. I love NBN, they are my favourite group, but nothing here touches their best work and you won't be wondering why these didn't make any of their albums. 'Cold World' sounds a bit...unstructured, for want of a better word. Treach yelling over the hook doesn't fit. 'What Now' continues with more conscious rap. Anthony Hamilton blesses the hook. Again, I don't enjoy Treach as much as I usually do. The delivery of the verse is a bit underwhelming. 'The Projects' sounds more '90s, but also low quality. Maybe the mixing wasn't done... 'Respect' is the hardest song and one of my favourites. Vinnie and the others speak on their love and respect for hip hop. 'Hard Times' continues with more of a hardcore hip hop feel and is another strong song. Naughty and Treach were great at making pop rap, and 'Breezy' is another example of that. The chill beat suits Treach more here and he flows more naturally over his three verses. As mentioned, 'Wifey Material' is one I've heard before. It's decent pop rap. Best Track: Respect, Hard Times, Breezy
0
I like Silverchair from the Freak Show and particularly the Neon Ballroom days but I'm not liking this much. It's a little too soft compared to their older work. Some songs are okay but I'm not digging anything too much.
0
I like Redman on the mic and love Erick Sermon as a producer, but I can't get into this album a huge amount. It's an album that despite being just over 50 minutes has always felt longer to me. In saying that, what I like I generally love with 'Time 4 Sum Aksion' being one of, if not Redman's greatest song. It's a good album, but I don't rank it up there with the best of them, as for some reason on the whole it's never grabbed me enough. Best Tracks: Time 4 Sum Aksion, So Ruff, Blow Your Mind, Redman Meets Reggie Noble, How to Roll a Blunt.
0
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