Author Topic: All Hip Hop review of Blood Money  (Read 337 times)

Meho

All Hip Hop review of Blood Money
« on: May 01, 2006, 06:08:42 AM »
Blood Money

Artist: Mobb Deep
Title: Blood Money
Rating:     
Reviewed by: Martin A. Berrios



Even though Mobb Deep gained enormous street fame in the 90's with their classic The Infamous, the Queensbridge duo have never quite lived up to that earlier greatness on subsequent releases. They showed hints of again reaching their potential here and there on Hell On Earth and Murda Muzik, but didn’t serve up the thorough follow-ups needed to keep their cult status granite solid. With their last album, Amerikaz Nightmare, Progidy and Havoc were met with another lukewarm response. In customary scorned rapper fashion, they blamed the label and bounced. With a new free agent status in place, 50 Cent scooped the boys up in ‘05 and made them G-Unit's first official signing outside the Interscope family tree. The result is Blood Money (Infamous/G-Unit/Interscope); Mobb's strongest batch of work since they laced us with "Quiet Storm".

Overall P and Hav don’t stray too far from their distinctive formula. The hood drama meets gritty production on the album's first single "Put Em In Their Place". Sha Money XL cooks up blazing horns to match the group’s stern demeanor. On "Capital P, Capital H" they justify their unbecoming ways over a laid back distorted bass track laced with synth. On "Pearly Gates" the Mobb shows deeper range as they take an atheist view at life with a show stealing verse from 50 Cent. All three Queens natives converse skeptically over a playful soul sample driven track. Havoc’s bars ultimately put the writing on the wall: "I found myself asking God what the fuck is my purpose/You go to heaven, know I’m foul but put a good word in."

Sonically, the album keeps an overall dark overtone. On "Speakin So Freely" Havoc lays some eerie guitar strings over some soft drum kicks, setting a proper backdrop for the Mobb's thinly veiled diss to some of their former homeys. H continues showcasing his production prowess when utilizing speedy high hats and kicks with an awkward noise about every two bars on the Lloyd Banks assisted "Stole Something". The distorted bass heavy “Backstage Pass” is sure to get maximum love on the block as well.

With what seems to be a necessarily evil amongst rappers, Mobb fall into the trap of forcing a radio friendly hit. "Hollywood" Hav and "V.I." P try to recreate the magic of 50’s "Candy Shop" with "Give It To Me"; but fail to connect. Even a verse from Young Buck couldn’t save this joint.

While this technically doesn't feel like a true Mobb Deep effort (the G-Unit influence is obvious throughout the disc-where's Noyd?), Blood Money still bangs. This album is sure to push Mobb Deep back to the forefront. Curtis wins again.




 

Efrain

Re: All Hip Hop review of Blood Money
« Reply #1 on: May 01, 2006, 09:54:53 AM »
fuck that shit, I bet the soundscan #'s will show end all this crap. I'm betting these guys do less than 50k this week.
 

ABN

Re: All Hip Hop review of Blood Money
« Reply #2 on: May 01, 2006, 11:51:18 AM »
fuck that shit, I bet the soundscan #'s will show end all this crap. I'm betting these guys do less than 50k this week.
uhhh, this is almost as good as that post about this album knocking in the car
*throws out my entire collection of classic albums yet again just coz they didn´t scan several million units*
 

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Re: All Hip Hop review of Blood Money
« Reply #3 on: May 01, 2006, 01:33:42 PM »
it could of sold a lot it just didn't have a big enough single, simple.

PLANT

Re: All Hip Hop review of Blood Money
« Reply #4 on: May 01, 2006, 02:41:40 PM »
Not a bad review...I like most of the tracks except "Give it to me"
 

Efrain

Re: All Hip Hop review of Blood Money
« Reply #5 on: May 01, 2006, 05:22:48 PM »
fuck that shit, I bet the soundscan #'s will show end all this crap. I'm betting these guys do less than 50k this week.
uhhh, this is almost as good as that post about this album knocking in the car
*throws out my entire collection of classic albums yet again just coz they didn´t scan several million units*

First off, can you name me at least 5 CLASSIC hip-hop albums that didn’t sell at least 500,000 units?

And that's not even the point. The point is this isn’t a classic hip-hop album; it's not even trying to be one. There is nothing new here, nothing innovative... this is the G-Unit formula. The G-Unit formula isn’t a brew for classic hip hop records its a carefully created recipe to deliver sales. For these guys (G-Unit) it's about sales and money. It’s what they brag about, what they pride themselves on, its what they're all about dude. None of these guys are running around experimenting with new sounds trying to be creative and that being the case why would you judge them on that basis. No, the answer is Mobb Deep (like G-Unit) decided to try their hand in the BUSINESS of music, the side that focuses on units sold and revenue generated. And if that's how they want to construct their records you can be damn sure that’s how I'm going to evaluate their worthiness. What, you think 50 is going to keep bragging about how great this "Blood Money" record is (was) if it doesn’t hit 200k? Somehow I don’t think so.
 

mauzip

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Re: All Hip Hop review of Blood Money
« Reply #6 on: May 01, 2006, 05:46:27 PM »
Blood Money

Artist: Mobb Deep
Title: Blood Money
Rating:     
Reviewed by: Martin A. Berrios



Even though Mobb Deep gained enormous street fame in the 90's with their classic The Infamous, the Queensbridge duo have never quite lived up to that earlier greatness on subsequent releases. They showed hints of again reaching their potential here and there on Hell On Earth and Murda Muzik, but didn’t serve up the thorough follow-ups needed to keep their cult status granite solid. With their last album, Amerikaz Nightmare, Progidy and Havoc were met with another lukewarm response. In customary scorned rapper fashion, they blamed the label and bounced. With a new free agent status in place, 50 Cent scooped the boys up in ‘05 and made them G-Unit's first official signing outside the Interscope family tree. The result is Blood Money (Infamous/G-Unit/Interscope); Mobb's strongest batch of work since they laced us with "Quiet Storm".

Overall P and Hav don’t stray too far from their distinctive formula. The hood drama meets gritty production on the album's first single "Put Em In Their Place". Sha Money XL cooks up blazing horns to match the group’s stern demeanor. On "Capital P, Capital H" they justify their unbecoming ways over a laid back distorted bass track laced with synth. On "Pearly Gates" the Mobb shows deeper range as they take an atheist view at life with a show stealing verse from 50 Cent. All three Queens natives converse skeptically over a playful soul sample driven track. Havoc’s bars ultimately put the writing on the wall: "I found myself asking God what the fuck is my purpose/You go to heaven, know I’m foul but put a good word in."

Sonically, the album keeps an overall dark overtone. On "Speakin So Freely" Havoc lays some eerie guitar strings over some soft drum kicks, setting a proper backdrop for the Mobb's thinly veiled diss to some of their former homeys. H continues showcasing his production prowess when utilizing speedy high hats and kicks with an awkward noise about every two bars on the Lloyd Banks assisted "Stole Something". The distorted bass heavy “Backstage Pass” is sure to get maximum love on the block as well.

With what seems to be a necessarily evil amongst rappers, Mobb fall into the trap of forcing a radio friendly hit. "Hollywood" Hav and "V.I." P try to recreate the magic of 50’s "Candy Shop" with "Give It To Me"; but fail to connect. Even a verse from Young Buck couldn’t save this joint.

While this technically doesn't feel like a true Mobb Deep effort (the G-Unit influence is obvious throughout the disc-where's Noyd?), Blood Money still bangs. This album is sure to push Mobb Deep back to the forefront. Curtis wins again.

How many Aftermath (related) topic have you opened in the last month? :tosser:
 

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Re: All Hip Hop review of Blood Money
« Reply #7 on: May 01, 2006, 05:57:20 PM »
does anybody have "the infamous" album?  i've been looking for someone who has it but no one yet that album is dope  8)
Oh I like this one... One dog goes one way, the other dog goes the other way, and this guy's sayin', "Whadda ya want from me?

 

PLANT

Re: All Hip Hop review of Blood Money
« Reply #8 on: May 01, 2006, 08:37:32 PM »
does anybody have "the infamous" album?  i've been looking for someone who has it but no one yet that album is dope  8)
I can help you out with this
 

kingwell

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Re: All Hip Hop review of Blood Money
« Reply #9 on: May 01, 2006, 09:41:03 PM »
WRONG SECTION
WRONG SECTION
WRONG SECTION
WRONG SECTION
WRONG SECTION