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Bizzy Bone

Disco de Bizzy Bone: “Bone Brothers (Edited Version)”

Información del disco :
Título: Bone Brothers (Edited Version)
Fecha de Publicación:2005-02-22
Tipo:Álbum
Género:Hip-Hop/Rap, Mainstream Rap, Midwest Rap
Sello Discográfico:KOCH
Letras Explícitas:Si
UPC:099923575429
Lista de temas :
1 Intro Video
2 Like Me Bizzy Bone and The Bone Brothers
3 What's Friends Krayzie Bone, Bizzy Bone and The Bone Brothers
4 No Rules
5 Felicia Skit
6 Give It to Me
7 Need Your Body Krayzie Bone, Bizzy Bone, The Bone Brothers and Kareem
8 Complicated Bizzy Bone, Outlawz and The Bone Brothers
9 Hip Hop Baby Krayzie Bone, Bizzy Bone and The Bone Brothers
10 Real Life
11 Blow You Away Bizzy Bone, The Bone Brothers and Skano
12 Str8 Ridaz Krayzie Bone, Bizzy Bone and The Bone Brothers
13 Everyday
14 EveryDay - (with Krayzie Bone/Wish Bone)
Análisis (en inglés) - AMG :
Finally bringing the much-anticipated reunion of Bone Thugs-N-Harmony brothers Layzie and Bizzy to the stereo, The Bone Brothers is a frustrating album if there ever was one. Skip ahead halfway through this jumble of styles if you want the good news, because the first half of the album is tangled in uninspired venom and commercial thug throwaways. "Like Me" apes Eminem so hard it hurts, "What's Friends" rips off Whodini's "Friends" without adding anything new to it, and the misguided "Dick Rider" tries to marry Bone thugging with Jay-Z's sparkle. Luckily, Layzie's and Bizzy's raps are more hit than miss during these moments, but in regard to production, everything feels forced and choruses that want to be street anthems end up sounding weak and contrived. Once you hit "Give It to Me," a whole new world opens up, and that lazily rolling Bone style is back. It's less ambitious, but the effervescent, feel-good "Hip Hop Baby" is up there with "Crossroads." "Str8 Ridaz" and "Complicated" are worthy additions to your next mixtape of the extended Bone family, and one on-point track after another balances the fake urgency that sours the album's first half. All this said, hearing so much Bone family interaction after loads of solo albums is a nostalgic thrill for anyone who used to spend countless hours listening to Cleveland's finest. That's just enough to recommend this up-and-down album to veteran fans, but the casual Bone listener can pass. ~ David Jeffries, All Music Guide
Análisis (en inglés) - :
Finally bringing the much-anticipated reunion of {$Bone Thugs-N-Harmony} brothers {$Layzie} and {$Bizzy} to the stereo, {^The Bone Brothers} is a frustrating album if there ever was one. Skip ahead halfway through this jumble of styles if you want the good news, because the first half of the album is tangled in uninspired venom and commercial thug throwaways. {&"Like Me"} apes {$Eminem} so hard it hurts, {&"What's Friends"} rips off {$Whodini}'s {&"Friends"} without adding anything new to it, and the misguided {&"Dick Rider"} tries to marry {$Bone} thugging with {$Jay-Z}'s sparkle. Luckily, {$Layzie}'s and {$Bizzy}'s raps are more hit than miss during these moments, but in regard to production, everything feels forced and choruses that want to be street anthems end up sounding weak and contrived. Once you hit {&"Give It to Me,"} a whole new world opens up, and that lazily rolling {$Bone} style is back. It's less ambitious, but the effervescent, feel-good {&"Hip Hop Baby"} is up there with {&"Crossroads."} {&"Str8 Ridaz"} and {&"Complicated"} are worthy additions to your next mixtape of the extended {$Bone} family, and one on-point track after another balances the fake urgency that sours the album's first half. All this said, hearing so much {$Bone} family interaction after loads of solo albums is a nostalgic thrill for anyone who used to spend countless hours listening to Cleveland's finest. That's just enough to recommend this up-and-down album to veteran fans, but the casual {$Bone} listener can pass. ~ David Jeffries, All Music Guide
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