Ghostface
Killah
Album : Bulletproof Wallets
Realase date : November 20, 2001
Label : Sony
Review :
As the only Wu-Tang MC (outside of the GZA) to not record a lackluster solo
release, Ghosface’s third album comes with sky-high expectations. Ghostface
continues to flow out of a sense of urgency, his cadence dripping with emotion
on hot RZA-produced numbers like "Maxine." Ghost’s exceptional storytelling
abilities are intact ; on "Never Be the Same" he confronts a former
lover with Carl Thomas crooning on the hook. Likewise, on the awesome Alchemist-produced
"The Forest" he builds a rhyme around popular fairy-tale characters.
While sloppy hooks
plague tracks like "Theodore" and "The Jucks" (pop your
collar, huh ?), it’s the inane interlude skits and wildly uneven production that
bogs down this release. By album’s end you get the vintage Wu sound on "The
Hilton"—grimy beats matched by Ghost’s intense flow—and "Street
Chemistry" boasts a remarkable piano loop mixed in with a sampled female
voice, but it all comes a little too late.
Dalton Higgins
| Tracklisting : 1. Intro 2. Maxine 3. Flowers 4. Never Be the Same Again 5. Teddy Skit 6. Theodore 7. Ghost Showers 8. Strawberry 9. Forest 10. Juks 11. Walking Through the Darkness 12. Jealousy 13. Hilton 14. Interlude 15. Love Session 16. Street Chemistry |
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