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  • WAYM Reviews:

    Review by Nathan S.

    Built on the back of Lil Wayne’s stellar success, the Young Money movement is Weezy’s attempt to follow Jay-Z’s blueprint (pun intended) and become not just a rapper, but an industry powerhouse. To that end he’s put together a mostly Southern-focused roster of artists who, with one notable exception, have yet to experience anything even remotely approaching their head honcho’s level of fame.

    Enter the compilation album We Are Young Money, a project that’s half commercial, half musical enterprise. With 11 different primary artists, plus at least five guest appearances, coming up with a definitive statement about this album is sketchy, but that doesn’t mean there’s not enough substance here to bite into. But first, we need to quickly run through the Young Money roster. Here’s the super-abbreviated version:

    Drake: Needs no introduction.
    Nicki Minaj: A female rapper with a schizophrenic style and a deeply controversial fashion sense. Her highly-anticipated debut album will drop sometime in 2010.
    Jae Millz: Harlem rapper whose early projects failed to make an impact. Trying to re-invigorate his career via Young Money.
    Tyga: Mostly known as the coconut juice guy - apparently spending time around Lil Wayne has seriously upped his emcee game.
    Mack Maine: From New Orleans, Mack is also the president of Young Money. Think of him like Birdman: maybe not the best rapper in his own right, but he plays his role.
    Gudda Gudda: Widely considered to be the next Young Money artist to blow, though they’ve been saying that about him for years now.
    Lil Twist: Super young kid from Texas. Basically signed to lock down Young Money’s teen girl demographic.
    Shanell: Young Money’s resident crooner. Considered the “softer, sexier side” of the label.
    T- Streets: Um…he’s a rapper who’s signed to Young Money. Past that, you got me. Which means we’re supposed to know him well by the end of the album.
    Lil Chuckee: Like Lil Twist, another super young kid. I’m assuming he reminds Wayne of himself when he was young and hanging out with Birdman.

    Ok, now that we’ve got that straightened out we can get down to business, starting with Every Girl, the smash single that epitomizes the blessing and curse of a compilation album. With a bouncing beat, Lil Wayne’s star power and a great verse from Drake (his “let’s be honest”/“lesbianish” line was dope), it’s no surprise Every Girl was a smash, but Millz, Gudda and Mack feel like last minute additions to what’s essentially a Wayne-Drake hit, especially when they’re all auto-tuned to death. Most radio stations only play the Wayne-Drake version, so if the goal of the album was to get the lesser known guys some attention, mission un-accomplished. By contrast the album’s other single Bedrock is more of a legit posse cut, although no one’s verse is particularly worth mentioning. In fact, I’d argue the beat, courtesy of Kane Beatz, and Lloyd’s catchy hook did more to make the track a hit than any Young Money contribution. It’s the same story on the album’s other potential radio hit, Ms. Parker, an enjoyable but not great track. To recap, not a particularly impressive start from Young Money.

    Considering they essentially only make one appearance, I might as well get Lil Chuckee and Lil Twist’s track Girl I Got You out of the way. Even if it’s wasn’t a little creepy to hear kids rhyme about f**king like Kim Kardashian and Reggie Bush, the track’s still barely listenable. Moving on…

    The rest of the album is an assortment of more street-oriented cuts and attempts to let the Young Money cast get their moment in the spotlight. The album’s lead track Gooder is a banger that does prove Jae Millz is at the very least a rapper with a damn solid flow. I can’t say the same for Gudda Gudda, whose basic rhyme skills are evident on the ironically clichéd New S**t. Same goes for Mack Maine. T-Streets, whom I didn’t know before this, deserves a mention for his quality verse on Wife Beater, Tyga deserves a most-improved award for his work (his verse on Wife Beater is hilarious) and Shanell impresses on Be In My Band (even if the track sounds like another failed Rebirth cut). Last but not least, love her or hate her, Nicki Minaj can’t be ignored, although over the course of an album her wild style can become oddly predictable (especially on Roger That, where she sounds almost bored).

    Regular readers knew an extended sports analogy was inevitable, so here we go. If We Are Young Money was a NBA team, they’d be the 2006-2007 Lakers: one superstar (Kobe/Lil Wayne), a very good player who hadn’t yet proven he could be great (Odom/Drake) and a potential superstar in the making (Bynum/Nicki) surrounded by a mostly forgettable supporting cast. So on a purely hip-hop level there’s no way We Are Young Money will win a championship. On the other hand, if the primary goal of We Are Young Money was to serve as an extended commercial, considering I just spent 850 words talking about them, I’d say they did a pretty damn good job. It’s Young Moolah, baby.

    Read more: http://www.djbooth.net/index/albums/rev ... z0aITlEdTh

    Meh

    And i'll say 'reviews' for later additions.
    http://www.iamshanell.com
    LOG ON AND GET INTO IT!!!!

  • #2
    Re: WAYM Reviews:

    And Another:

    On a cursory level, Young Money is currently the only Hip Hop crew inching toward mainstream acceptance. With the celebrity of Lil Wayne, coupled with the Drake success story and newfound respect for Nicki Minaj, Young Money appears at face value to be on the steady climb. That is until the member-to-talent ratio is broken down, which is where We Are Young Money meets it most dismal moments.

    It would be both incorrect and unfair to label We Are Young Money a failure. The album ultimately serves its function, offering a platform for the Young Money affiliates to showcase their abilities. Lil Wayne compiled his army from random acts he met along the way (i.e. dancer-turned-singer Shanell ) and people he came up with. Then there are the artists who had clusters of buzz in their careers (Jae Millz, Tyga, Mack Maine, Drake, Nicki Minaj) to which Wayne capitalized on their followings by bringing them under the Young Mula umbrella.

    The problem here is that unlike past posse introductory albums (see Wu-Tang Clan’s Enter The 36 Chambers), there isn’t a level playing field where everyone has an equal opportunity to become a star. The individual successes of Wayne, Drake, and Nicki alone make a compilation like this too late for them and too early for the rest. Practically every song on the album features Lil Wayne, even when unnecessary like on the opener “Gooder”, where Jae Millz, Gudda Gudda and Mack Maine grab the reigns to craft a raw track until Weezy jumps in acting silly. The founding father of this whole movement is the one stifling the talent he’s trying to cultivate by either doing better than his constituents or far worse. The existing singles “Every Girl” and “Bedrock” should really just be Wayne and Drake cuts, and Nicki Minaj owns most of the tracks she’s present on including “Roger That” and “Fuck da Bullshit”, two more songs that could’ve done without Wayne.

    Ironically enough, neither Drake nor Nicki brought their A-game to this compilation and why should they? This was their first non-mixtape turned album debuts, so they’re obviously reserving their powers for their own individual projects. Still they manage to outshine everyone. The Young Mula premies Lil Chuckee and Lil Twist have their own misplaced track called “Girl I Got You”, and since they both sound like they’re six years old, you can’t help but remember how weird Wayne sounded when he first started out eons ago. As for crew members like T-Streetz, his presence is barely felt except on horrendous tracks like “Wife Beater” and “She Is Gone” where attempts at witty banter about girl problems turn disastrous.

    It’s clear that Lil Wayne is attempting to recreate the Cash Money legacy with Young Money. In the CMR pool, the best floated to the top and the rest offered the assist. However, when you’re starting a crew with existing fame, there is no way to showcase a team effort and We Are Young Money is proof of that. If the three most famous members get any more famous, then the rest can just rename themselves the St. Lunatics.

    Can we get someone not shit talking?
    http://www.hiphopdx.com/index/review...re-young-money
    http://www.iamshanell.com
    LOG ON AND GET INTO IT!!!!

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: WAYM Reviews:

      " Nicki Minaj: A female rapper with a schizophrenic style "

      I thought I was the only one who thought so

      And if weezy signed lil twist just for the young females he coulda got me

      I don't think they talkin' shit just bein' the critics that they are

      It is what it is lets see how it sells

      Twitter.com/ThisIsMVP

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