| Big L Lifestylez Ov Da Poor and Dangerous |
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 | Tracklist: 1. Put It On
2. MVP
3. No Endz, No Skinz
4. 8 Iz Enuff
5. All Black
6. Danger Zone
7. Street Struck
8. Da Graveyard
9. Life Stylez Ov Da Poor & Dangerous
10. I Don't Understand It
11. Fed Up Wit The Bullshit
12. Let 'Em Have It 'L'
Release Date: 1995 | |
| | other reviews | scyther (4.5) It’s the Big L, comin’ at you once again in ‘95... |
On 12 Lists
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| Summary: A solid enough debut hurt by an abundance of plodding beats and repetetive song ideas. Not a good representation of Big L's immense talent. |
0 of 1 thought this review was well written
The 1990's were a great time for hip-hop heads in New York, back when it was the breeding ground for hip-hop's boldest innovators. From Brooklyn's Notorious B.I.G. to Queensbridge's Nas to Big Pun in the Bronx, New York had the game locked.
Brooklyn was the borough getting the most shine, but one of New York's greatest lyricists was from the severely underrepresented Harlem - Lamont Coleman, to be know to the world as Big L.
L came up freestyling, making a name for himself battling before joining up with Fat Joe's DITC crew and setting the underground on fire.
Lifestyles Ov Da Poor & Dangerous is his debut, and the only album he completed before being shot fatally in his own Harlem Danger Zone neighborhood. It is hailed as his magnum opus, being followed by the half-completed album The Big Picture.
Lifestylez isn't quite a classic, but is still a treatt for any hip-hop head looking for a healthy dose of the grimy underground **** you just can't find nowadays.
The first song and single, "Put It On," is the best representation of L's gifts on the album, combining his punchline-laced, mile-a-minute flows with a shout-along chorus courtesy of Kid Capri and minimal beat by the same. The track is a classic, but casts a shadow over the rest of the album, which is stylistically consistent with "Put It On," but never manages to match its greatness.
From the second track, the quality has a noticable drop, with the follow-up, "MVP," showing a watered-down, auto-pilot Big L; things only get worse from there, with "No Endz, No Skinz" essentially being "Put It On" with different words in the chorus.
"8 Iz Enuff" recuperates, making New York history with - as the title suggests - 8 different MCs taking turns pounding the mic into submission, which they all do incredibly well. Here's the key part, though: among those MCs were Cam'ron and Jay-Z, making their first on-record appearances ever.
The 5 songs that follow are all anthems about how dangerous L and Harlem are. They are good in their own right, but all sort of bleed together because of how incredibly similar they sound.
"I Don't Understand It" is a warning shot to all up-and-coming rappers and a song mourning the mainstream's ability to appreciate the real hip-hop L so well embodies. It's followed by a song lamenting police brutality, an idea without much real bite because it's a theme L has already explored repeatedly throughout the album.
Overall, it's an album full of L's trademark wit (see "Da Graveyard"'s bost that L pumps his enemies full of enough lead that "they could use they dick as a pencil") and some reasonably good freestyle flows, but boring, incredibly repetitive beats and themes will alienate anyone not buying it to hear a few good punchlines.
Ultimately, it's a good album, it doesn't come close to realizing L's huge potential.
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GANGSTA
This Message Edited On 08.31.08
Digging: PSY/OPSogist - Kings Of Sleep
| | | More descriptive than your Heavy D review, but it doesn't say much about the music.
| | | Anyone who writes like that is mentally retarded, it looks like you are illiterate in your review but that's only because of the song titles.
| | | Should make a point of mentioning the low fi audio production on this record. If your schooled in hip hop i suppose it would be common knowledge of the simplistic audio tracks backing mcs in the early 90s but noting it in the review is probably worth its merit. Id recommend grabbing 'the big picture' if your interested in getting into Big L before his first album here.
| | | Album Rating: 4.5
the title track is gangster
| | | Oh god the album title
Digging: Say Anything - Say Anything
| | | @bigone, I think it would serve you well to combine some of the paragraphs. Basically, it makes for an easier read if you have a main topic point/argument, then show evidence to support that point, and then sum it, before moving onto to the next point.
Besides that, alright review, was informative, but like your thoughts on the album, I thought it wasn't at its full potential.
| | | Album Rating: 4.5
solid album
Digging: Wale - Attention Deficit | | | Album Rating: 4.5
'm lookin nuthin like ya poppa
I wouldnt give a chick 10 cent to put cheese on a Whopper
they wanna know why im so fly
a girl ask me for a ring and i put one around her whole eye
| | | Album Rating: 4.5
theres no way this deserves anything less than a 4
danger zone is my favorite track so far
| | | Album Rating: 4
a 3? Wow. Id easily give this a 4. Its a classic. Too bad Big L left before he truly blew up.
| | | Album Rating: 4
I never wear rubbers bitch, if I get aids, f*ck it!
Yo! This album rules btw, one of the best hip hop albums ever made.This Message Edited On 02.08.09
| | | Album Rating: 4
It's the 10th anniversary of his death today.. so R.I.P. Big L, one of the greatest MCs ever noticed.
| | | Album Rating: 4
r.i.p.
| | | i'm on some satanic shit
| | | Album Rating: 5
strictly
little kids be wakin up yellin MOMMY BIG L IS COMIN TO GET ME
Digging: Gucci Mane - The Burrprint | | | second album is so good.
Digging: Do Make Say Think - Other Truths
| | | Album Rating: 5
do any of you guys have the collection of his freestyles? they're seriously amazing...you can find lines he reused in actual songs
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