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Disco de DJ Khaled: “We the Best [PA]”
![Disco de DJ Khaled: “We the Best [PA]” Disco de DJ Khaled: “We the Best [PA]”](http://www.rapmusiczone.com/covers_prD/dj-khaled/2007_170_170_We%2520the%2520Best%2520%255BPA%255D.jpg) Descripción (en inglés) :
Personnel: DJ Khaled (rap vocals); Leroy Romans (keyboard).
<p>Additional personnel: Flo Rida, Dre, Fat Joe, Ja Rule, Jadakiss, K-Foxx, Akon, Lil Wayne, Paul Wall , Pooh Bear, Rick Ross, T.I., The Game, Trick Daddy, Trina, Young Jeezy, Beanie Sigel, BirdMan, Juelz Santana, Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, T-Pain, Plies, Brisco, Bun B, C-Ride (rap vocals).
<p>DJ Khaled comes from the DJ Clue school of disc-jockeying. He isn't known for his production skills and is far from a master turntablist. What he does have, though, is connects--mad connects. And as his second full-length release, WE THE BEST, shows, DJ Khaled's connections extend far beyond Miami city limits, as Lil Wayne, Fat Joe, Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, Jadakiss, Beanie Siegel, Juelz Santana, and Young Jeezy are just the tip of the iceberg. With production from Cool & Dre, Beat Novocaine, and the Runners, among others, WE THE BEST bangs with 12 tracks of neck-snapping, Dirty South slop. Fellow Miami representatives Rick Ross and Trick Daddy are also prominently featured.
Lista de temas :
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Intro (We the Best) - (with Rick Ross) |
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Movement Skit, The - (with K-Foxx/DJ Khaled) |
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We Takin' Over - (with Lil Wayne/Fat Joe/Rick Ross/BirdMan/T.I./Akon/DJ Khaled) |
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Brown Paper Bag - (with Lil Wayne/Fat Joe/Rick Ross/Dre/Juelz Santana/Young Jeezy/DJ Khaled) |
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I'm So Hood - (with Trick Daddy/Rick Ross/T-Pain/DJ Khaled/Plies) |
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Before the Solution - (with Beanie Sigel/DJ Khaled) |
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I'm From the Ghetto - (with Lil Wayne/BirdMan/DJ Khaled) |
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Hit Them Up - (with Bun B/Paul Wall/DJ Khaled) |
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'S' on My Chest - (with Lil Wayne/BirdMan/DJ Khaled) |
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B**** I'm From Dade County - (with Trick Daddy/Rick Ross/Trina/Dre/Brisco/DJ Khaled/C-Ride/Flo Rida) |
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Originators, The - (with Bone Thugs-N-Harmony/DJ Khaled) |
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| 12 |
New York - (with Ja Rule/Jadakiss/Fat Joe/DJ Khaled) |
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Bitch I'm From Dade County - (featuring Trick Daddy/Trina/Rick Ross/Dre/Brisco/Flo-Rida/Pitbull) |
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Kingston, Jamaica - (featuring Bounty Killa/Sizzla/Junior Reid/The Marleys) |
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You'll See - (with Christina Milian) |
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Información del disco :
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UPC:099923422921
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Formato:CD
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Tipo:Performer
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Género:R&B - Rap
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Artista:DJ Khaled
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Productor:Dre; The Runners; Cool; Danja; Cain
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Sello:Koch Records (USA)
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Distribuidora:Koch (Distributor USA)
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Fecha de publicación:2007/06/12
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Año de publicación original:2007
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Número de discos:1
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Length:50:57
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Mono / Estéreo:Stereo
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Estudio / Directo:Studio
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6 personas de un total de 6 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Beat Novakane Indeed {2 ½ Stars}
"DJ" Khaled's sophomore effort is pretty easy to break down. Dude is trying too hard to come off hard and it's having the opposite effect on him. He looks more and more lame after every track. It's albums like this that make me say that rap is a lot like pro wrestling -- exaggerated and fake. "Brown Paper Bag" features Young Jeezy, Juelz Santana, Rick Ross, Fat Joe, Lil' Wayne & Dre (of Cool & Dre) on what is easily the corniest song of '07. I mean, have you ever seen or heard a guy trying so hard to prove how hard they are that they end up sounding or looking like a clown? Well that song, and so many of the other tracks on this album are like that. That's what makes this album so silly. Some will say I'm hating on the south, but this album could've come from Canada and it would've still been terrible. I'm still on my crusade to have Rick Ross placed in front of a firing squad because he's been garbage from day one. He alone is responsible for 3 or 4 songs going from "okay" to "doo doo" and he almost ruined "We Takin' Over". Anything Rick Ross doesn't destroy gets finished off by Baby aka Birdman. Him and Ross manage to soil too many songs to make purchasing this a good idea. It would also help a lot if Khaled would quit screaming "we the best" on every track. I'm not talking like once or twice either. He starts almost every song off with it and there are tracks where he says it at least 10 times. Another gripe of mine is that the large number of guests seems like overkill. Again, he's trying too hard.
The best songs on the album are the ones where Khaled abandons the formula and tries something different. Despite a hit and miss hook and Khaled's constant yapping, I found "Before The Solution" quite enjoyable after hearing Beanie Sigel unload over some dope production. "The Originators" is another interesting track that features Bone Thugs-N-Harmony. The problem with the good songs is that Khaled has to run his mouth for 45 seconds before the start of every song.
We The Best is actually one of the worst releases of 2007. It's generic, recycled material that anyone with even a little bit of common sense can see right through. Generic, thoughtless song titles, drugs, guns, jewels, lame rappers....I mean, this is straight up by the book factory rap. I see why he calls himself Beat Novakane now....my brain feels numb after hearing this. I recommend downloading the singles and steering clear of this sorry excuse for an album.
Standout Tracks: We Takin' Over (Remix) feat. Akon, R. Kelly, T-Pain, Lil Kim & Young Jeezy, Hit 'Em Up feat. Bun B & Paul Wall, The Originators feat. Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, and We Takin' Over feat. T.I., Akon, Birdman, Lil' Wayne, Fat Joe & Rick Ross
2 personas de un total de 2 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Beat Novakane Indeed {2 ½ Stars}
"DJ" Khaled's sophomore effort is pretty easy to break down. Dude is trying to hard to come off hard and it's having the opposite effect on him. He looks more and more lame after every track. It's albums like this that make me say that rap is a lot like pro wrestling -- exaggerated and fake. "Brown Paper Bag" features Young Jeezy, Juelz Santana, Rick Ross, Fat Joe, Lil' Wayne & Dre (of Cool & Dre) on what is easily the corniest song of '07. I mean, have you ever seen or heard a guy trying so hard to prove how hard they are that they end up sounding or looking like a clown? Well that song, and so many of the other tracks on this album are like that. That's what makes this album so silly. Some will say I'm hating on the south, but this album could've come from Canada and I would've still been terrible. I'm still on my crusade to have Rick Ross placed in front of a firing squad because he's been garbage from day one. He alone is responsible for 3 or 4 songs going from "okay" to "doo doo" and he almost ruined "We Takin' Over". Anything Rick Ross doesn't destroy gets finished off by Baby aka Birdman. Him and Ross manage to soil too many songs to make purchasing this a good idea. It would also help a lot if Khaled would quit screaming "we the best" on every track. I'm not talking like once or twice either. He starts almost every song off with it and there are tracks where he says it at least 10 times. Another gripe of mine is that the large number of guests seems like overkill. Again, he's trying too hard.
The best songs on the album are the ones where Khaled abandons tries something different. Despite a hit and miss hook and Khaled's constant yapping, I found "Before The Solution" quite enjoyable after hearing Beanie Sigel unload over some dope production. "The Originators" is another interesting track that features Bone Thugs-N-Harmony. The problem with the good songs is that Khaled has to run his mouth for 45 seconds before the start of every song.
We The Best is actually one of the worst releases of 2007. It's generic, recycled material that anyone with even a little bit of common sense can see right through. Generic, thoughtless song titles, drugs, guns, jewels, lame rappers....I mean, this is straight up by the book factory rap. I see why he calls himself Beat Novakane now....my brain feels numb after hearing this. I recommend downloading the singles and steering clear of this sorry excuse for an album.
Standout Tracks: We Takin' Over (Remix) feat. Akon, R. Kelly, T-Pain, Lil Kim & Young Jeezy, Hit 'Em Up feat. Bun B & Paul Wall, The Originators feat. Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, and We Takin' Over feat. T.I., Akon, Birdman, Lil' Wayne, Fat Joe & Rick Ross
1 personas de un total de 1 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Decent Album
This cd was worth the money. It has some good joints on it, but it could have been better.
1 personas de un total de 1 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Not So The Best
Although there are a couple tracks on this CD that area "listen" worthy, DJ Khaled's over zealous way of getting on each and every track by screaming "We The Best" every five seconds gets highly annoying after the first couple tracks. The artist hold this CD together..not the beats or the DJ!!
JList (USA) - 13 Junio 2007
5 personas de un total de 7 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Hopefully, "The Best" Will not usher in a "new" era of rap...
The overall tone of this album, if not painstakingly clear, is that there are producers/rappers/"artists" in this world, and those present are "The Best." This idea is reiterated to you over, and over, song after song.
It seems like "The Best" define themselves:
1. Without any verbs (would it be so hard to say "We 'are' the best"?
2. With tracks such as "Brown Paper Bag," "I'm So Hood," & "I'm From the Ghetto," speak absolutely nothing about how they make album after compilation album, and have nothing to do with this "rough life" that is being portrayed. We see your yacht, "ice," and rims, I'm sure you don't sell highly illegal substances anymore, or live in the ghetto anymore.
3. In case you forget, just about every song has the same, high-pitched voiced guy come on and quote, "We the Best," "DJ Khaled aka (insert variation or alias)," and whoever raps on the specific track. The few exceptions have only a minimal of this flagrant, annoying avertising, such as "Hit 'em Up," "'S' On My Chest," & "Fed's Taking Pictures."
4. Coincidentally, these three tracks are probably the best tracks off of the 10 song album, (1 intro, and 1 skit).
5. If they decided to actually make a track, rather than make an advertisement with beats behind it, then maybe this album could actually have some value.
This was a highly disappointing album. You would think with this much producing diversity, and only having the job of picking beats to put on your album, that a higher quality compilation would be put out. Once again, when I listen to an album, I do not want to hear the album name, the producers, guest artists, & aliases repeatedly. I can read the track info.
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