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Huey

Huey Album: “Notebook Paper [PA]”

Huey Album: “Notebook Paper [PA]”
Description :
The Midwestern MC known simply as Huey follows in the footsteps of fellow St. Louis rap stars Nelly and Chingy on his debut album, NOTEBOOK PAPER. Hot off the success of his smash lead single, the club banger "Pop, Lock and Drop It," Huey keeps things moving with a slew of slick party anthems set to zooming synthesizers and stammering drum machines. NOTEBOOK PAPER features production from Jazzy Pha, Tha Bakery, and Raw Beatzz, as well cameos from Kydd Trell, Bow Wow, Memphitz, T-Pain, and Lloyd.
Customers Rating :
Average (3.4) :(7 votes)
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Track Listing :
1 Intro/Notebook Paper Video
2 Bout Dat Video
3 Aye Video
4 Pop, Lock & Drop It Video
5 Closet Full of Clothes - (with Kydd Trell)
6 2 Nite Video
7 Tell Me This (G-5) - (with MempHitz)
8 Money Ova - (with Diamond & Yo Gotti)
9 My Zone Video
10 When I Hustle - (with Lloyd)
11 Luv N Ya Life - (with Asia Cruise)
12 Nobody Love the Hood
13 Glad 2 B Alive - (with T-Pain)
14 Pop, Lock & Drop It - (remix, with Bow Wow/T-Pain)
Album Information :
Title: Notebook Paper [PA]
UPC:886970853323
Format:CD
Type:Performer
Genre:R&B - Gangsta/Hardcore
Artist:Huey
Producer:Mickey 'MempHitz' Wright; Lawrence
Label:Jive Records (USA)
Distributed:BMG (distributor)
Release Date:2007/06/19
Original Release Year:2007
Discs:1
Mono / Stereo:Stereo
Studio / Live:Studio
L. Hoyt - July 22, 2007
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
- Pretty Good Debut

Notebook Paper from Huey is a pretty good cd. The lyrics are a little below par but the production is pretty nice and the songs just fit him. Pop, Lock, & Drop It, the first single from the album is a good song and the remix featuring Bow Wow and T-Pain is a little better. You have to be into the southern rap genre to like this cd but overall is worth buying.

Top 5:

1.Closet Full Of Clothes

2.Pop, Lock, & Drop It (Remix)

3.Aye

4.When I Hustle

5.Pop, Lock, & Drop It

Ruben D. Gonzalez - July 22, 2007
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
- Back to School

I love this album. I start my day listening to these songs. I am ordering another copy as my brother like it very much and ask me to give him the cd.

Pablo - June 24, 2007
0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
- Style and flare to spare, but he needs work.

Huey is the newest emcee to come from the city of St. Louis, Missouri. Most of the rappers that preceeded him have long been known to be critical targets for most hip-hop heads; Nelly, Chingy, and J-Kwon alike have all been the target to hate in their heydays. While most of those artists warranted the hate(with the exception of Nelly on a few occasions), I believe Huey comes straight outta the box with more promise than any of the aforementioned artists hailing from his hometown. That doesn't instantly make this a good album, however.

Is Notebook Paper a good album? Yes, but nothing more. Huey shows a lot of promise and potential as an entertainer, but rarely shows glimpses of brilliance. While Huey is already one step-ahead of other commercial newcomers this year like Mims and the Shop Boyz, he doesn't exceed the ground Rich Boy set. He's got a lot of style, and flare in his delivery, and most of the production consist of phat, banging beats; but that's it.

Pop, Lock & Drop It, the first single, has an amazingly heavy beat that is sure to test your speaker's endurance. The hook, accompanied with a dance step, is addictive, and Huey's verses are competent enough to make the song a cerified hit. While it's easy for most closed-minded hip-hop 'elitists' to shun a track such as this for its success and intoxicating qualities, Huey's debut single was a great way to introduce himself to the masses.

Pop, Lock & Drop It isn't the only tight song on the album; the R&B cut featuring this year's favorite crooner, Lloyd, When I Hustle, is a nice, smooth collaboration, and the perfect choice for a second single. 2 Nite is a tight track that would sound even better under the influence of Screwston's purple drank, or at least, sounds tailor fitted for the chopped and screwed treatment. Nobody Loves The Hood is a deep cut focused on the lack of responsibility people take for the troubles found within urban neighborhoods, and Glad 2 Be Alive is an introspective cut featuring R&B sanga of the moment, T-Pain. T-Pain is also featured, along with Bow Wow, on the decent Pop, Lock & Drop It remix. Even the materialistic Closet Full Of Clothes gets by on the tight beat, and chopped and screwed hook; Huey's charisma also helps to carry this track along where it might've failed.

Overall, Huey's Notebook Paper is a nice debut from a talented young artist. There's plenty of room for improvement, but it's hard to hate on Huey for this release. At twenty years of age, there's plenty of room for growth, and rest assured, Huey WILL be back for a second round.

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