Master P - The Ghettos Tryin To Kill Me
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 See Larger Image | The Ghettos Tryin to Kill Me! Artist : Master P List Price : $16.98 USD ProductGroup: Music Release Date : 1997-11-04 Studio : Priority Records Label : Priority Records Avg. Customer Rating : (23 reviews)
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Reviews Customer Reviews for The Ghettos Tryin To Kill Me This version sucks Rating: Let me say this I just recently got the 94 version of this album. I got the 97 version because it was the only one I could get. I ran into some extra money and bought the original on ebay.
It was like listening to a different cd even though I know most of the songs. Every song is cut but two. I knew the songs where cut but I had no idea that some of these ho's jack was cut. King George is on it. I then realize that I have been listenig to crap. If you never hear the 94 version you won't mind this because it is not bad. But, forget that it is missing two songs the original is better because it seems like a complet album. Study being a gangsta is tight as hell though. I'm not going to list the other reasons that make it different you can read other reviews for that. This cd is undergroud as hell, raw and gangsta not like fiddy and g-unot. This is when ni@@as didn't give a f*ck. 3 and half stars for the 97 version, 5 stars for the original. Cop this one only if you have to.
Customer Reviews for The Ghettos Tryin To Kill Me Cd dis version aint dat bad but i got da '94 version Rating: yea da '94 version is better n daz da 1 i got
dey left out tha song "study being a gangsta"
n daz a tight song but da bonus tracks is tight too
pick this up
Editorial Reviews for The Ghettos Tryin To Kill Me Audio Cd Amazon.com This is the first Master P solo record, from back when his home base was Richmond, California--just a hop, skip, and jump from Oakland's trunk funk. As such, it plays like a selection from the lost Too $hort tapes. Slow, heavy bass, mystic whistles, and gratuitous grunts pepper the album as P retells standard tales of pimp and gangster life. Despite the declaration on "Hands of a Dead Man" that "most blacks, they don't know about politics," there's little teaching here. On the very next track, "211," the chorus repeats with no emotion whatsoever, "We needed cash, we robbed the liquor store." Here, keeping it real rarely means keeping it right. --Jon Caramanica
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