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Such grumpy old mannerisms raise the question: Can hip-hop age gracefully? Without becoming boring or bitter? No living artist embodies the art form quite like Jay-Z, and with his 40th birthday fast approaching, the rap world is looking to him for life lessons from the other side of the hill.

Instead, Jay chooses to define wisdom merely as the opposite of youth. Kelly Mp3. International superstar and multi-media mogul, JAY-Z confirms the most highly speculated date in recent music history. Jay-Z - Count It Off Jay-Z - I'll Be Jay-Z - Mi Amor Jay-Z - Queen Bitch Remix Jay-Z - That's Right Jay-Z - Wake Up Jay-Z - Crazy In Love Jay-Z - Fiesta Remix Jay-Z - Heartbreaker Jay-Z - It's Obvious Jay-Z - Keep It Real Jay-Z - Love For Free Jay-Z - Rock Steady Jay-Z - Storm Jay-Z - We Ride Jay-Z - 7 Minute Freestyle Jay-Z - Flow Jay-Z - Funk Flex Freestyle Jay-Z - Get High Freestyle Dots Jay-Z - Murdergram Freestyle ft.

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Follow facebook. Intro - My Fans Jadakiss - Freestyle Exclusive Jadakiss - Lil Bruh Dr Dre - Dissin 50 Cent The Black Album. If The Black Album is Jay-Z's last, as he publicly stated it will be, it illustrates an artist going out in top form. For years Shawn Carter has been the best rapper and the most popular, a man who can strut the player lifestyle with one track and become the eloquent hip-hop everyman with the next, an artist for whom modesty is often a sin, and yet, one who still sounds sincere when he's discussing his humble origins or his recurring doubts.

As he has in the past, Jay-Z balances the boasting with extensive meditations on his life and his career. The back history begins with the first song, "December 4" his birthday , on which Carter traces his life from birth day to present day, riding a mock fanfare and the heart-tugging strings of producer Just Blaze, along with frequent remembrances from his mother in This Is Your Life fashion.

And he can rock with the best as well, working with Rick Rubin on a cowbell-heavy stormer named "99 Problems" that samples Billy Squier and outrocks Kid Rock. The only issue that's puzzling about The Black Album is why one of the best rappers needs to say goodbye -- unless, of course, he's simply afraid of being taken for granted and wants listeners to imagine a rap world without him.

Change Clothes. Jay-Z kept The Blueprint incredibly tight, focusing on a single sound and letting nothing interfere with some of the best raps of his career. No one else in hip-hop possesses enough power of personality to carry a minute double album, and if Jay-Z can't quite manage it either, he certainly delivers some solid material in the process.

The discs are split into "The Gift" and "The Curse," though there's no concept in view, just a loose collection of tracks ranging from unapologetically sexed-up party joints to theatrical epics and even taking in a Dirty South feature for Outkast's Big Boi. It's clear Jay-Z's in control even here, and though his raps can't compete with the concentrated burst on The Blueprint, there's at least as many great tracks on tap, if only listeners have enough time to find them.

Good choices for highlights include the Neptunes' bounce track "Excuse Me Miss," the horn-driven blast of "The Watcher 2" produced by Dr. Jay-Z Unplugged. The Dynasty. At the time of The Dynasty Roc la Familia's release, Jay-Z had already established himself as a towering figure in the rap world.

His previous two albums -- Vol. Carter -- spawned numerous gigantic hits and were filled the brim with the biggest hitmakers in rap: producers like Timbaland and Swizz Beatz; rappers like Juvenile and DMX.

So rather than try to one-up these albums with yet more super-producers and big-name rappers, Jay-Z took a different approach on The Dynasty.

He brought in a stable of up-and-coming producers the Neptunes, Just Blaze, Kanye West and handed the mic to his in-house roster of Roc-a-Fella rappers Beanie Sigel, Memphis Bleek, Freeway with the intention of bolstering his rap "dynasty" i. The approach works well. The Dynasty Roc la Familia still sounds like a Jay-Z album, but it's different enough from his past work to make it exciting and unique. In terms of rapping, the omnipresence of Beanie Sigel and Memphis Bleek spices up "Parking Lot Pimpin'," another album highlight, but is a drag on other songs, where Jay-Z seems like a guest on his own album.

Guest appearances by Snoop Dogg and Scarface are much more welcome, two of only three non-Roc-a-Fella guest features here. The Dynasty plays overall like a Roc-a-Fella mixtape rather than a Jay-Z album, which means you'll have to endure a lot of promotional posse tracks, particularly toward the end of the album.



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