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Young jeezy album 2007
Young jeezy album 2007





young jeezy album 2007

There’s a six minute song with Rick Ross and the Game, which is no fun now that they’re all getting along with each other. Akon” as a hint.) Conversely, a Jeezy track named "Black Eskimo" could never live up to what you think it might sound like. Otherwise, you've heard it all on Seen It All*:* there’s something called “Been Getting Money” and you could probably come up with 85% of it in your head before your first listen.

young jeezy album 2007

And though he has nothing to gain by doing so, even Jay Z is willing to name names and get specific about his days herbin' 'em in the home of the Terrapins. If not remorse, Lil Boosie shows the real consequences of his jail sentence on “Beez Like”, bemoaning how he missed the first time his daughter had her period.

Young jeezy album 2007 full#

Which results in Jeezy being shown up by every rapper who’s willing to offer something close to full disclosure.

young jeezy album 2007

Here’s what we can tell about Jeezy’s life: he experienced much success as a drug dealer prior to rapping, he has a lot of guns and has fallen out with friends over money, and he really thinks you should try Tequila Avion because it's fucking awesome. Given the number of times it's mentioned, Seen It All could pass for a longform Avion commercial you'd think the first 35 years of Jeezy's life were mere prelude to being named a "Multicultural Advisor" for the brand. Jeezy’s music is post-triumph and visceral, channeling the power of what it feels like to be Trapper of the Year four years in a row even if you're doing concentration curls or a heavy load of laundry, or you're just enduring a long commute back from your office job.Īnd that’s still the case, as Seen It All: The Autobiography doesn’t deliver on either one of its titular promises. It’s a transformation that’s occurred by circumstance rather than growth the dude doesn’t tell stories and, while pithy, he doesn’t spit wisdom. This makes Seen It All intermittently enjoyable, even if it completely cuts against the presumed goal of presenting Jeezy as an elder statesman of the South along the lines of Bun B or Scarface. He also rhymes “Plaxico” with “Texaco” like Gucci Mane, and “Atlantic” with “Atlantic” like Rick Ross, so you're left reminiscing about a time when all three rappers were all actually still beefing and making great music. He boasts about having a cooking show on Netflix called “The Best Bricks”, which, come on-at least call it “House of Birds” or "Orange is the New Crack". He’s got birds like Chick-fil-A however, he’s on the block on Sundays, unlike Chick-fil-A. He made light of this on The Recession’s “Word Play”, which silenced the “lyrical” heads with half a bar-“I’m way too intelligent/ To play with my intelligence.” And here, Jeezy delivers a host of howlers with the aplomb and lack of quality control you’d expect from a stand-up working out new material. That’s what he’s always been, really-his bars were all slogans, ad-libs, and smart/dumb similes that were delivered so confidently, you could only briefly eye-roll before ad-libbing right along with him. It’s not necessarily an insult to call Jeezy a punchline rapper at this point. Jeezy’s more respected than influential right now-the sound of Atlanta rap bears more in common with the vocal and lyrical unorthodoxy of his former rival Gucci Mane or current collaborator Future-making Jeezy a classic rock riffer in a post-punk world, which means he’s lasted long enough to possibly appeal to the purists who dismissed him back in 2004. But their beats lack that record’s assured sound. He’s given tracks from Mike WiLL Made-It and Drumma Boy, which barely sound that different from what Shawty Redd provided Jeezy on Thug Motivation 101: Let’s Get It.

young jeezy album 2007

Moreover, Jeezy struck up a valuable alliance with DJ Mustard and even if you don't remember a single track from TM103, it still sold 233,000 copies in its first week. But since it’s the hottest track here, the bosses ostensibly let it slide. He calls out Def Jam's endless meddling by name in “Me OK”, all while threatening to drop his album on Atlantic. The guy is in a spot that makes executive decisions more difficult: he’s still bankable, but not an A-lister. You might’ve noticed that Jeezy's dropped the “Young”, but that’s the only time the transitional nature of Seen It All is entirely his doing.







Young jeezy album 2007