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Best album of 2006?

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    Best album of 2006?

    From start to finish, hands down, it's gotta be Lupe Fiasco's newest effort, Food & Liquor. Because of the heavy bootlegging he was forced to make basically a new album and it's turned out great in my honest opinion. You guys really gotta cop this album when it comes out, even though the album cover is extremely wack. Here's the tracklisting:
    Lupe Fiasco ft. Gemini & Sarah Green- He Say She Say
    Lupe Fiasco- Hurt Me Soul
    Lupe Fiasco- I Gotcha
    Lupe Fiasco- I Might Be OK
    Lupe Fiasco- Kick, Push
    Lupe Fiasco- Kick, Push II
    Lupe Fiasco- Sunshine
    Lupe Fiasco- The Cool
    Lupe Fiasco- The Emperor's Soundtrack
    Lupe Fiasco ft. Jay-Z- Pressure
    Lupe Fiasco ft. Jill Scott- Daydreamin'
    Lupe Fiasco ft. Jonah Matranga- The Instrumental
    Lupe Fiasco ft. Matthew Santos- American *********
    Lupe Fiasco ft. Sarah Green- Real

    #2
    Originally posted by Smokin' View Post
    From start to finish, hands down, it's gotta be Lupe Fiasco's newest effort, Food & Liquor. Because of the heavy bootlegging he was forced to make basically a new album and it's turned out great in my honest opinion. You guys really gotta cop this album when it comes out, even though the album cover is extremely wack. Here's the tracklisting:
    Lupe Fiasco ft. Gemini & Sarah Green- He Say She Say
    Lupe Fiasco- Hurt Me Soul
    Lupe Fiasco- I Gotcha
    Lupe Fiasco- I Might Be OK
    Lupe Fiasco- Kick, Push
    Lupe Fiasco- Kick, Push II
    Lupe Fiasco- Sunshine
    Lupe Fiasco- The Cool
    Lupe Fiasco- The Emperor's Soundtrack
    Lupe Fiasco ft. Jay-Z- Pressure
    Lupe Fiasco ft. Jill Scott- Daydreamin'
    Lupe Fiasco ft. Jonah Matranga- The Instrumental
    Lupe Fiasco ft. Matthew Santos- American *********
    Lupe Fiasco ft. Sarah Green- Real
    Best Album I've ever heard.

    Comment


      #3
      To me Game and Nas had the best albums last year. But Lupe's is up there too.

      Comment


        #4
        Best of 2006 was Ne-Yo's In My Own Words

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by neils7147933 View Post
          Best of 2006 was Ne-Yo's In My Own Words
          He had a few songs that were good (No ****).

          Comment


            #6
            Food & Liquor hands down... No competition.

            Comment


              #7
              Gnarls Barkley-St. Elsewhere

              MF Grimm-American Hunger(if you havent heard this album, you MUST)

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by S1MANC View Post
                Food & Liquor hands down... No competition.
                Agreed.

                There were a few good albums in 2006 but NONE of them compared to this!!

                The long wait is finally over. After teasing us a year ago with a hot cameo on Kanye West's "Late Registration" CD, getting the newly won fans even more amped up with the "Kick, Push" single and video, and making everybody so damn hungry that bootleg copies and MixUnit.com CD's like "Touch the Sky" had to satiate the public's appetite, it's finally time to sit down with some "Food & Liquor." Major label debuts are always tough but for the Chicago native born Wasalu Muhammad Jaco and better known as Lupe Fiasco this one couldn't be any harder. He's already been around the bend once before, getting signed and dropped by a major before his album even came out, so this time patience IS a virtue. Lupe's good, he might even be really damn good, but at 25 he's only just getting started in the rap game and people are already expecting him to be the savior of hip-hop music. So before we get this review started, CALM THE **** DOWN. Let's let Lupe be Lupe and the rest will fall into place all on its own. "Intro" to the side, let's slide into the first song produced by Lupe the Third's partner in crime for most of this album - no not Jigen, but a man called Soundtrakk who samples from "How Does it Feel" to give us something "Real":

                "Lusssst... sometimes can override trusssst
                She said that's why she gave it up
                My man said blood spilled out of everything he tou-chhhhed
                He crushed everything he crushed
                Ruined everything he loved, he just wanted to rushhhhh
                Blamed it on the times bein rough
                Doin dirt, with the devil, chasin after the dusssst
                Make a fussss, if it's them, but we hushhh, if it's us
                That's why, my momma said she wanted somethin REAL"

                Now I gotta give it up to Lupe because even in a day and age where you can shuffle album tracks digitally into any order you want, it was still risky to start the CD off with this one. The heavy rock backdrop doesn't lend itself to the formulaic start and finish bars of many rap bars, but it's obvious Lupe wrote the lyrics while listening to the track and molded his lyrics and his flow to fit and it works perfectly. Being bold and different for Lupe pays off right from the jump. Things are a little more tradititional on the Prolyfic laced "Just Might Be OK," which is so upbeat you might actually be inclined to agree with the song's title. "Affirmative, no further furnishin is needed/I believe we are completed/Dig, we all in agreement on the wallpaper/happy with the color scheme, welcome to the crib." Thanks Lupe - mind if I grab a beer from the fridge and put my feet up on the sofa? Cool. The album moves on to "Kick, Push" which we should all be familiar with by now, but yet I've always wondered - is Lupe telling a story about someone else or was HE the one who was "branded, since the first kickflip, he landed" in the song? He seems more intimately aware of skateboarding than Skateboard P. Speaking of Pharrell, the next track on the album is the lone Neptunes beat of the CD for a song titled "I Gotcha." It's good, but the echoing drums and understated backdrop of Mike Shinoda's beat on "The Instrumental" are even better. Don't be fooled by the title, Lupe's still got rhymes:

                "He just sits, and watches the people in the boxes
                Everything he sees he absorbs and adopts it
                Heeeeee mimics and he mocks it
                Really hates the box but he can't remember how to stop, it
                Uhh, so he continues to watch it
                Hopin that it'll give him somethin that he can box with
                Or how the locksmith, see the box as, locked in the box
                Ain't got the combination to unlock, it
                That's why he watch-es, scared to look away
                Cause at that moment, it might show him
                What to take off the locks with
                So he chains his self to the box, took a lock and then he locked it
                Swallowed the combination and then forgot, it
                As the doctors jot it all down, with they pens and pencils
                The same ones that took away his voice
                And just left this instrumental"

                Damn. That opening verse works on so many different levels it's hard to even name them all - it all depends on what YOU as the listener consider "the box" to be. What's scary is that Lupe Fiasco didn't even have to try this hard to be impressive. "Food & Liquor" was probably going to sell well no matter what based on the hype and the public demand, but instead of half-assing it or turning in a bunch of club tracks with no thought to them he seems to have gone 180 in the other direction and made EVERY SINGLE WORD MEANINGFUL. You can even hear it in the way that Lupe flows, carefully choosing which beats to pause at and which syllables to either emphasize or elongate. This is a man who takes the craft of hip-hop lyricism very seriously. Thankfully the beats are just as serious. Soundtrakk makes a name for himself on the symphonic backdrop of "He Say She Say" provides the perfect backdrop for the somber and sad verses of what it feels like to be a fatherless child. On the flipside Soundtrakk makes things so bright and positive that the aptly titled "Sunshine" brings you out of the darkness right into the light. The "Daydream in Blue" sampled and inspired epic "Daydream" featuring Jill Scott, the Kanye West laced "The Cool," and the smooth Needlz jam "Hurt Me Soul" all keep things flowing until Lupe links up with Jay-Z for the Prolyfic produced "Pressure" where Lupe Fiasco is out to prove he's got the rap game sewed up LITERALLY:

                "And so it seems that I'm, sewin jeans
                And, 1st and 15 is just a sewin machine
                So I, cut the pattern and I, sew in seams
                And, button in this hustlin then publically I'm Buddy Lee
                There's no bustin them and cuffin them is like
                usherin in the regime, they want me to make Prince pants
                But I withstand, I ain't gotten into that
                A little big in the waist, two-pocket on the back
                Call them Nu-vi's, O.G.'s covered in blue dye
                Give 'em the game, that's like givin chocolate to the fat
                Look, how you think I got here?
                That's the same game that came through where I lived as a kid
                in the bad luck truck and threw boxes off the back
                Made me a ripper, deliver like river
                Content a little more thicker, slicker
                Yeah, and they said oil and water don't mix
                Now they all down at the beach washin off the fish
                Was Blackbeard 'til I brought the Roc into your ships"

                I've been impressed by some major label debut albums before, but quite honestly I think Lupe Fiasco takes the cake here with his "Food & Liquor" and eats it too. Fiasco wasn't satisfied with just a slice of the rap game, he wanted the whole damn pie. Lupe's only problem now is the same one Kanye had - when your first album is that ****ing good, where do you go next? I look forward to finding out how he'll follow this up and what dishes he'll serve up next.

                Comment


                  #9
                  oooh, i had:


                  Doctors Advocate first, followed by Food & Liquor....

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by Smokin' View Post
                    From start to finish, hands down, it's gotta be Lupe Fiasco's newest effort, Food & Liquor. Because of the heavy bootlegging he was forced to make basically a new album and it's turned out great in my honest opinion. You guys really gotta cop this album when it comes out, even though the album cover is extremely wack. Here's the tracklisting:
                    Lupe Fiasco ft. Gemini & Sarah Green- He Say She Say
                    Lupe Fiasco- Hurt Me Soul
                    Lupe Fiasco- I Gotcha
                    Lupe Fiasco- I Might Be OK
                    Lupe Fiasco- Kick, Push
                    Lupe Fiasco- Kick, Push II
                    Lupe Fiasco- Sunshine
                    Lupe Fiasco- The Cool
                    Lupe Fiasco- The Emperor's Soundtrack
                    Lupe Fiasco ft. Jay-Z- Pressure
                    Lupe Fiasco ft. Jill Scott- Daydreamin'
                    Lupe Fiasco ft. Jonah Matranga- The Instrumental
                    Lupe Fiasco ft. Matthew Santos- American *********
                    Lupe Fiasco ft. Sarah Green- Real

                    Food and Liquor , Illmatic & 7 Day Theory,my 3 favorite albums,classics
                    Last edited by bishop2006; 12-19-2007, 04:00 PM.

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