music is subjective folks and to me personally, i was not feeling the production much but more so what he was saying in it and the presentation of the video.
Payroll Giovanni [of Doughboyz Cashout] - Hustlas & Bosses ft. B-Legt+Big Quis+Clay
i really can't stand doughboy clay doing hooks. he sounds like your drunk uncle at family parties
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if you noticed, NARD is never on songs that feature twista on it. i had a discussion with a friend on this and think it's cause NARD isn't good with fast rapping songs. dude is still around but i don't think rap is all that high on his priority.
well i think they didn't do stuff in the 90s because of contracts and them being pushed or in their own minds, pushing to do stuff they assumed WOULD SELL as opposed to just doing things for fun. this project was probably paid off fully by twista alone. i doubt AK or belo have much money to put...
yeah, i heard it. for me personally, i liked the intro and withdrawl songs are the best. it held the vibe of old DOD but updated. the rest of the tracks was filler to me and kind of cheesy attempts to sound current. i would give you a direct download but i ain't sure it's good to but you can...
i heard songs here and there by doc 9/b-dawg and the beats sound so much like what woodie did and weren't watered down. i haven't been active on this site in general so i'm behind on everything. who's doing the production for these folks? it really steps up the quality of this very limited genre.
yeah, it was posted on fakeshore awhile back. judging from the features, it's done in-house because those singers/producers were on twista's last album.
back in the 90s, a lot of chicago rappers mostly put out EPs for various reasons and now it seems to be popular again for rap in general.
i really can't name a lot off the top of my head right now and also any outside of chicago but......
co-killa/d-fly "aftershock"
bbq "bad blood"
da smart...