Dropping the sequential album titles for his third release, 's introduces itself as anything but Thug Motivation 103. The opening title track features a collage of some very 2008 news reports where America is going broke while the 'they just don't care about us' feeling sweeps the nation. Then enters trading his non-stop swagger for social commentary, and while the singalong thug chorus is as strong as ever, the rapper's transformation from cocaine-slinging king to voice of the people is unconvincing, especially when he mentions his personal driver and how his 'make it rain' sessions at the strip club are getting more conservative.
The Barack Obama shout-out that closes the album - 'My President' with special guest - works much better with flippant verses ('We ready for damn change/So you all let the man shine') more suitable for a man who prefers to be called 'The Snowman.' Same goes for 'Circulate' and its great line about oil prices ('Gas higher than me') but abandons politics often enough that you can't call it ponderous or even a concept album. With those great drums and fake trumpets producer loves so much, trap star anthem 'Amazin' is simple, feel-good music for pimps and players, while the soul-filled 'Word Play' finds and the celebrating the power of rap with warm nostalgia in their hearts.
Young Jeezy - Pandora. If problems continue, try clearing browser cache and storage by clicking here.This will cause a logout. The Recession is the third studio album by American rapper Jeezy. It was released on September 2, 2008, by Corporate Thugz Entertainment (CTE) [1] and Def Jam Recordings. The album was supported by five singles: ' Put On ' featuring Kanye West, ' Vacation ', ' Crazy World ', ' My President ' featuring Nas, and ' Who Dat '.
'Put On' with singing through an Auto-Tune is the usual second-line goodness that normally rounds out albums with, but there's more forgettable filler than expected, most of it sounding like mixtape leftovers or in the case of 'Vacation,' lackluster and forced club tracks. Of course with 18 songs the album allows for some dead weight and trimming. Even if it falls a distant third out of the first three, the scattershot is still a welcome and even risky step forward, one carried by its highlights and the newfound awareness that the cocaine grind isn't everything.
Young Jeezy's The Recession wouldn't know a credit crunch if it came up and bit it on its bonus track. This Atlanta kingpin is sitting on a wealth of talent and he invests it wisely, spreading sharp boasts across more than a dozen tracks, which, despite the variety of producers, all hew to the standard Jeezy formula: epic synth-strings mixing with slow, martial beats. While songs like 'Circulate' and 'Vacation' are club ready, it's 'My President Is Black' (featuring Nas), wherein the emcee rips the price of crude oil and questions military service, that a more community-minded Jeezy pays his dues. Young Jeezy's The Recession wouldn't know a credit crunch if it came up and bit it on its bonus track.
This Atlanta kingpin is sitting on a wealth of talent and he invests it wisely, spreading sharp boasts across more than a dozen tracks, which, despite the variety of producers, all hew to the standard Jeezy formula: epic synth-strings mixing with slow, martial beats. While songs like 'Circulate' and 'Vacation' are club ready, it's 'My President Is Black' (featuring Nas), wherein the emcee rips the price of crude oil and questions military service, that a more community-minded Jeezy pays his dues. Young Jeezy's The Recession wouldn't know a credit crunch if it came up and bit it on its bonus track.
This Atlanta kingpin is sitting on a wealth of talent and he invests it wisely, spreading sharp boasts across more than a dozen tracks, which, despite the variety of producers, all hew to the standard Jeezy formula: epic synth-strings mixing with slow, martial beats. While songs like 'Circulate' and 'Vacation' are club ready, it's 'My President Is Black' (featuring Nas), wherein the emcee rips the price of crude oil and questions military service, that a more community-minded Jeezy pays his dues.