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Disco de Clipse: “Lord Willin [Bonus DVD]”

Disco de Clipse: “Lord Willin [Bonus DVD]”
Información del disco :
Título: Lord Willin [Bonus DVD]
Fecha de Publicación:2003-01-28
Tipo:Desconocido
Género:Hip-Hop/Rap, East Coast Rap, Mainstream Rap
Sello Discográfico:Star Trak/Arista
Letras Explícitas:Si
UPC:828765005524
Valoración de Usuarios :
Media (4.2) :(107 votos)
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53 votos
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31 votos
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17 votos
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3 votos
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3 votos
Lista de temas :
1 Intro Video
2 Young Boy
3 Virginia Video
4 Grindin' Video
5 Cot Damn Ab-Liva, Coldchain, Roscoe P. and Clipse
6 Ma, I Don't Love Her Video
7 FamLay Freestyle FamLay and Clipse Video
8 When The Last Time Video
9 Ego Video
10 Comedy Central Clipse and Fabolous Video
11 Let's Talk About It Jermaine Dupri and Clipse Video
12 Gansta Lean
13 I'm Not You Coldchain, Roscoe P., Styles P. Of The Lox, Clipse and Jadakiss Video
14 Grindin' (Remix) Clipse, N.O.R.E., Lil Wayne and Baby
15 Grindin' (Selector Remix)
musiqstar87 "Erick" (Huntington WV USA) - 02 Diciembre 2002
6 personas de un total de 6 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- {untitled review}

Clipse, the first group to sign onto the Neptunes Star Trak label, are one of the best acts of the year. Their debut album, "Lord Willin'", has a lot of good and weak points but still comes out as a VERY solid debut. Malice and Pusha T draw you into their raps with off the hook rhymes and the dopest of beats provided by their mentors, the Neptunes. The first single off of the album, "Grindin'", basically tells their whole life story (drug dealing) in front of a grungy and very addictive beat. Most of Clipse's debut set is made up of songs like this. "Comedy Central" (no, it's not funny) which features DJ Clue's new rapper Fabolous, is a great track. Made up of the same formula as "Grindin'", it tells the game of dealin' while keeping it ultra tight with the layed-back beat and Fabolous's slow paced rhymes. "Virgina" is another "Grindin'" look alike, even though it has a more uptempo beat and deals with different subjects other than drug dealing. Basically, the only other "Grindin'" clones are the two remixes of the song itself. The regular remix is great, not only the excellent qualities of the original, but with off the hook rhymes by N.O.R.E and the Big Tymers. The 'Selector' remix is not worth your time. Yes it does have that good beat but the only people rapping are those foreign artists like Sean Paul.

A completely different type of rapping is shown on the more uptempo numbers of this album. "Cot Damn" is a great track (that guy that is featured in this CANNOT RAP). With Pharrell belting out those two title words, he sets up the chorus perfect for Pusha and Malice to kill the rest of it. "Ma, I Don't Love Her" is an uptempo pop-like single featuring Bad Boy's queen of R&B, Faith Evans (i have a feeling this will be released). "When The Last Time", the 2nd single released from the album, is a good club and party track, a perfect follow-up to the 1st single. "Ego" is just plain good, the awesome beat followed up by the kick a** rapping totally makes this a track worth listening to. "Let's Talk About It", a previously released single from Jermaine Dupri which features Clipse is the most upbeat single on the album. (NOTE: You can find this song on Jermaine's album "Instructions". You can also find the remix of it on the So So Def album "So So Def: Definition Of A Remix".) The last uptempo number you'll hear is "Gangsta Lean", where Pharrell of the Neptune's literally sings his soul out. This is one of those softer songs as well.

But, out of all the good songs on "Lord Willin'", my personal favorite has to be "I'm Not You", which features LOX rappers Jadakiss and Styles P. This is a tale of growing up rough and forfelling your dreams, which in this case is drug dealing for Malice and Pusha T. (That guy that is in this song along with 'Cot Damn', why the heck did they ruin half of this song with him, he CANNOT RAP.)

Even though there are so many good songs on "Lord Willin'", i gave it 4 stars because of the constant repeating of the same exact thing on almost every song. The message Clipse is trying to get through is: WE DO NOT LIKE TO RAP, WE LIKE TO SELL DRUGS, SO IF WE HAVE TO RAP, WE ARE GOING TO RAP ABOUT SELLING DRUGS.

I say Clipse did an alright job for their debut, let's hope Clipse's 2nd album will hold steady the awesome beats and phat rhymes that made them popular in the first place.

SID "Punk" (BOSTON) - 09 Septiembre 2002
5 personas de un total de 5 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Lord Willin

Maybe The Neptunes-produced debut from Virginia roughnecks (and real-life brothers) Pusha T and Malice is a testament to the production duo's knack for making decent rappers sound good and good rappers sound great. While the Clipse aren't lyrical slouches, their bragfests aren't exactly revolutionary. Still, their solid, swerving cadences sound downright brilliant on the stripped-down stomp of "Grindin'" and the horn-driven "Young Boy." On "When the Last Time," the girl-crazy Pusha T asks himself, "What did it, the whip appeal or my baby face?" It was probably the slamming beats.

this Virginia hip-hop duo should have called their debut "E-Clipsed"--because that's certainly what happened after they hooked up with their in-state homies, the Neptunes. Brothers Pusha T and Malice are fine MCs who make some sharp and funny observations about the hard-knock life (although their argument for how rough things are in "VA" isn't exactly a novel one). But make no mistake: it's the behind-the-boards genius of the Neptunes' Pharrell Williams and Chad Hugo that makes Lord Willin'--the first release on their new Star Trak imprint--a must-hear.

Just when you think the pair's funk has gotten as sparse as possible, they do the minimalistic limbo yet again on "Grindin'"; hardly more than a car door-slamming beat, it still slams like crazy. On the more traditional side, the joyful R&B of "Gangsta Lean" proves equally irresistible, showcasing Williams's Curtis Mayfield-style testifyin' about hot bud in the summertime. No doubt the Clipse could have made a very credible album with someone else, but given this embarrassment of production riches, it's lucky they didn't.

J. Johnson "capricornrising1" (CT) - 08 Septiembre 2002
7 personas de un total de 8 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- BEATS NOT SOLD SEPERATELY

The Neptunes have to be the most forward-minded minds in contemparary R&B/hip hop and after releasing the brillant rock-funk-pop of "In Search Of..." as N*E*R*D so you know that they'd have to deliver a hot album for the first rappers off their new Star Trek imprint, The Clipse. For the most part they do.

The Clipse, Pusha T and Malice( brothers Gene and Terrence Thorton) are two 'hustlers' from Virginia with similar flows that rhyme about the ins and outs of the hustling game. Intrestingly, The Clipse were orginally signed with Eletkra and had a single called "The Furneral" which had a very striking video and just an overall different flow. Yet on their new debut, "Lord Willin", Pusha T (formely known as Terrar) and Malice spit over jaunty, edgy Neptunes beats. "Young Boy" has a '70s vibe to it with Pharell shouting "You're Outta Line!" like a soul shouter from the days of The Temptations and Joe Tex. "Virginia", a homage to their homestate has a hot understated beat that's just plain hot. The cocky "Cot Damn" and the clubby "When The Last Time"("Is it my whip appeal or my babyface"--that line is something else) also stand out as does the very R&B "Ma, I Don't Love Her" with Faith Evans. "Gangsta Lean" has a hot beat that slips and slides just right. So it's obvious that the beats are the real stars of the show. It's the ice cream sundae. T and Malice's rhymes are just the cherry on top. Although they do have lyrical shortcomings (not much variety in subjects) they come with some clever puns ("My niece askin' why the rims are bigger than the hoola hoop"). And I can't fail to mention "Grindin", the anthem with the tight Run-DMC-esque raw hand clap beat and the braggadocius rhymes about pushing coke. Intresingly, there's three versions of "Grindin'" to be found on "Lord Willin'". Not only the single version but two remixes. One featuring a unneeded Baby and Lil' Wanye but a tight Norega and another ill-suited reggae mix with Sean Paul and Canada's Kardinal Offishall. Why the label felt the need to contain multiple versions of the hit is anyone's guess but it's not too much of a distraction.

Overall "Lord Willin" is a musically tight disc that will turn out a party and play well in your car when you're in a hip hop mood.

Clayton Brown (Lithonia, GA USA) - 10 Septiembre 2002
3 personas de un total de 3 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- What do you expect

They've done it again this time with a group. The neptunes have produced another head banger from beginning to end with the exception of one or two songs. What did you expect from the neptunes they produce so many hits from Jay-z to LL cool J, and the clipse rapping from grindin to partying make a good combo. I can't wait for the next cd.

Jimmy Garcia (SLC, UT) - 23 Agosto 2006
2 personas de un total de 2 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Excellent

The Clipse is the upper echelon of street hiphop music. Great production w/some hardcore raps. I really enjoyed it. Rap fans should own it, to hear Pusha T and Malice drop some ill raps.

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