Young Jeezy Thug Motivation 101 Rapidshare Search

Posted in: admin22/11/17Coments are closed

May 28, 2011. Aye, i bump some of Jeezy shit but to call him anything other than an average artist with a few nice tracks in his entire career is stretchin it a bit. Jeezy is still ridin off TOD and Thug Motivation 101 popularity from 2005: I aint got nothin against him, i don't bump his shit but if he puts out A nice track i might. Urban music seems to be expanding like crazy. The rise of rap sub genres is growing more and more everyday. It seems like the younger generation is becoming simple, yet and still creative. The newest sub genre of rap is called 'trap' and it originates from southern rap. This brand of rap has been made popular by rap.

Young Jeezy Thug Motivation 101 Rapidshare Search

After 5 years Young Jeezy and DJ Drama finally reunite to drop the official warm-up to TM103, THE REAL IS BACK! 01 - The Real Is Back 02 - How U Want It 03 - Drama And Jeezy Speaks 04 - Win 05 - All The Money Feat 211 06 - Snow Go Feat Slick Pulla 07 - Broads Feat Scrilla & Slick Pulla 08 - Flexin Feat Fabolous & Yo Gotti 09 - Ballin-Feat-Lil-Wayne 10 - Rollin-Feat-Fabolous 11 - Slow Grind 12 - Hoodstar Feat Slick Pulla 13 - Count It Up Feat 2 Chainz 14 - Talk About It Feat Boo & Scrilla 15 - Run Dmc Feat Freddie Gibbs 16 - Count It On The Floor 17 - Four Feat Alley Boy 18 - I Ball I Stunt Feat Scrilla 19 - Drama And Jeezy Speaks 2 20 - Do It For You Feat Freddie Gibbs Attachment Size 29 KB . Couldn't have said it betta myself. Aye, i bump some of Jeezy shit but to call him anything other than an average artist with a few nice tracks in his entire career is stretchin it a bit. Jeezy is still ridin off TOD and Thug Motivation 101 popularity from 2005 I aint got nothin against him, i don't bump his shit but if he puts out A nice track i might keep it on my bumplist for a min, only thing he ever put out that i listened to from beginning to end was his first TOD mixtape back in 2005 didn't bump much of Thug Motivation 101, it kinda commercial sounding after that he just declined from there, his devoted fanny's keep him going, when he perform live he still have to perform shit off Thug Motivation 101 and TOD to keep people excited. Everything else he put out had some moments and a few nice tracks to keep around til you got tired of em in a few weeks.

I lost respect for this nigga for the simple fact that he plays with his fans too damn much. Tellin us he droppin his new album next month but next month turned to next year.

U want ur fans to stay loyal? Well it works both ways nigguh. Stop stalling and drop that shit already wtf is u scare of?? Thats just a sign of weakness to me.

That nigga knows his music is outdated and his having a hard time keepin up with this new sound from artists like Curren$y, Big Krit, and Wiz Khalifa, even tho i think Wiz is garbage the nigga has more followers than Jeezy now. Man rightnow Curren$y holds the #1 spot in my top 5, than Krit, and 3rd is Koopa.

This nigga Jeezy just sounds too commercial to me. His like the Drake of trap muzik.

Nigga still talkin about moving keys when in reality his nothing but a studio gangsta. This tape is aite.

Same-o, same-o. On to the next one. Shame these niggas are using this as a promo to tm 103. Jeezy and Drama reuniting deserves to be an event in itself.

Trap music has carved out its own spot in rap now since everyones doin it. I wouldn't expect to hear anything else from jeezy at this point. The only way your fuckin with this is if u like that trap music. That being said some niggas do it better than others.

Rozay pretty much jumped to the top of that list in my opinion which pretty much caused jeezy to lose some of his shine. The quality of his music fell off as well which caused him to lose the rest. I'm still rootin for jeezy but I feel like its ova for him. Hell yea these niggaz on here just trippin the mixtape hard and got good collabos and another crazy thing is when jeezy came out with that the recession album which was that real shit which alot of niggaz hate to here,they would rather be manipulated but when he was talkin that real shit off the recession niggaz was gettin mad sayin he need to go back to talkin about trap and now that he giving them what they want now they wanna bitch sayin that thats all he talk about but these niggaz asked for him to start back talkin about it but a i guess a hatta got have a excuse to hate. DIS NIKKA IS SCARED!

NIGGA SAT BACK ND WAITED UNTIL OTHA NIKKA'Z ALBUMS HIT THE STREET THEN HE PULLED BACK 2 CHANGE SHYT UP BECUZ HE KNOW HE WUS ABOUT 2 FUK UP HE PUTTIN A BUNCH OF TRAX OFF DA ORIGINAL ALBUM LIST ON THESE MIXTAPES ND DOIN A NEW ALBUM NIGGA AINT FOOLN ME! ANYWAY DIS MIXTAPE WUS SOFTER THAN HE NORMALLY DO IT GOT BORING AFTER THE FIRST LISTEN. JEEZY FELL OFF LETS MOVE THE FUK ON ALREADY! TRAP IS DEAD! AND JEEZY IS SCARED!

NIKKA FANS HOLDIN HIM DOWN THO I SEE DEY GONE RIDE R DIE ON HIS DICK. ---Nigga U gay!-. Gthang wrote:Jeezy would of made it with or without Jay-Z.

Why niggas always think of Jay-Z like his God?? I nevered like that camel toe face nigga. I never own any of his albums. I dont even download them for free. He made his career from biting off Biggies lyrics so i guess you can say, If it wasn't for BIG's punch lines Jay-Z would of nevered made it either. By the way, i rate this shit 5/10.

Most rappers get better and better over time. Mtv Splitsvilla Theme Mp3 Download. This nigga seems to be gettin worse. Bet the house on it Thank you bruh.why do niggas act like jay-z is jesus, niggas dont do math or even know the numbers to work with, dude has never sold hella albums.'

Never'.blueprint was the first album where niggas from all regions was just like jay-z is that nigga.his revenue came from fucking rocawear, which was dame's baby, jay pulled a shade tree deal and took over.jay-z a fucking snake. Further more name his last hot album? Gthang wrote:Jeezy would of made it with or without Jay-Z. Why niggas always think of Jay-Z like his God?? I nevered like that camel toe face nigga. I never own any of his albums. I dont even download them for free.

He made his career from biting off Biggies lyrics so i guess you can say, If it wasn't for BIG's punch lines Jay-Z would of nevered made it either. By the way, i rate this shit 5/10. Most rappers get better and better over time. This nigga seems to be gettin worse. Bet the house on it Thank you bruh.why do niggas act like jay-z is jesus, niggas dont do math or even know the numbers to work with, dude has never sold hella albums.' Never'.blueprint was the first album where niggas from all regions was just like jay-z is that nigga.his revenue came from fucking rocawear, which was dame's baby, jay pulled a shade tree deal and took over.jay-z a fucking snake.

Further more name his last hot album? I dunno bout jay's last album but that green lantern mixtape is still in my ipod and i dont have too many of jeezy's songs so i guess jay is better to me.

Ayyyyyyyyyyyeeeeee.AaayyyyyeeeeeeYou gotta believe, you gotta believe. From the moment you hear the opening adlibs on Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101 you know you’re in for something you have never heard before in hip-hop. There’s this darkness that surrounds TM101 but there’s also hope. There are catchy lyrics, hypnotizing beats, and overall the American dream: going from nothing to something. Young Jeezy wasn’t a rapper at the beginning of his music career but his artists kept getting locked up and he had to get his Clark Kent/Superman on by hopping in the booth. What he did was create a definitive album for hip-hop. TM101 turns 10 years old this month and it’s about time we begin to honor it for what it really is: a classic body of work.

The day was July 26, 2005; less than a month away from starting college at Indiana State. I don’t remember what I was doing that day but I do remember going to FYE, dropping $15 on TM101, heading to my car, and popping it in my Alpine CD player. I had a system in my 1995 Mercury Cougar at this time, a JL Audio amp with 2 12” Rockford Fosgate P2’s; this system was the one that lasted the longest in my car out of them all. I remember hearing “Thug Motivation 101” and just how crisp it sounded; then the Shawty Redd bass kicked in and my trunk began rattling. I instantly cracked a smile and started driving from the mall over to 7th St by my house.

I had been anticipating this album after hearing a few Jeezy tracks earlier in the year, most notably on Fabolous’ “Do The Damn Thing” and his own “Trap or Die” song with Bun B. I ran through and played the songs I had heard before, such as the previously mentioned “Trap or Die” and also the Mannie Fresh produced, and featured, “And Then What” before playing the album front to back.

During my first full listen I was awestruck. I hadn’t heard anything like this in my short amount of time listening to hip-hop. I was used to hearing the sappy radio songs, the boom-bap sound of classic hip-hop, Jay Z, and pretty much anything that wasn’t from the south. My brief experience with southern hip-hop started a couple of years before when the “crunk” era began taking over.

Before that, I knew of Outkast, Lil’ Jon & The Eastside Boyz, Ludacris, and some Three-6 Mafia and Project Pat songs. My parents didn’t listen to hip-hop so I had to discover it all on my own as a teenager; I had a lot of catching up to do. “I’m what the streets made me/ a product of my environment/ I’m what the streets gave me/ product in my environment” What I was exposed to on TM101 changed my perspective on music forever. Before this I thought you had to have extensive rhymes to be considered good. What I heard on this first Jeezy album was the struggle. It wasn’t my struggle, but it was something I felt I could relate to by listening to his story. Jeezy told us the story of what he did to get to this point; all of the drugs he had sold and all of the cases he had avoided just to get to this point in his life.

Out Hud Let Us Never Speak Of It Again Raritan on this page. At the release of the album he was 28, so he had seen and been through enough to document it audibly. The beautiful thing about it is he did it his way. He didn’t have to get lyrical, he didn’t have to have any pristine production in the background; he told his stories in a gritty way and the production showed that as well. From the scathing strings and filtered drums of the Akon assisted “Soul Survivor” to the “ladies” song that is “Tear It Up” to the obnoxious bass drums from Shawty Redd throughout, it was only going to take time before this style of music took off and became a trend. “Trap or Die gave em hope/ they waitin’ on the sequel/ it’s clear to see the boy Jeezy do it for the people” Artists had been rhyming about moving drugs and doing them for quite some time but none had done it in the way Jeezy did it on this album. He made it cool to learn about this lifestyle.

We can practically credit Jeezy with the creation of the trap rap sound: drug rhymes mixed with heavy bass and adlibs to boot. In one album, his debut at that, Jeezy changed the landscape of southern hip-hop which essentially changed the SOUND of hip-hop overall. Before the trap sound that was ushered in, hip-hop was being dominated by crunk. There’s nothing wrong with crunk music and it’s one of my favorite eras of hip-hop but the dynamic shift from crunk to trap happened in as little as two years.

Snap music tried taking over for the summer in 2006 but that was short lived before everyone wanted to sell drugs over heavy 808’s and rapid fire hi-hats. Jeezy helped open the doors for so many artists with this sound and gave them an opportunity to tell their struggle for us to understand and try to relate to. If it weren’t for TM101 we may not have artists like Starlito, Peewee Longway, Young Dolph, Future, Young Scooter, and the list can keep going.

“These are more than words/ this is more than rap/ this here is the streets/ and I am the trap” I go back and play TM101 from time to time and I always find a new favorite. Some days it’s the Young Buck and Lil’ Scrappy featured “Bang”, some days it’s the heavy drums of “Get Ya Mind Right”, and some days it’s the last track on the album in “Air Force Ones”.

The best thing that can happen when you go back and listen to an album 10 years after it has been released is realizing how fresh it still sounds with the new landscape of hip-hop. TM101 has stood the test of these first 10 years and still sounds as fresh as the first day it was released.

One final thing before I close this out: DID ANYONE FIGURE OUT THE RIDDLE JEEZY GAVE US ON “Gangsta Music”?!

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