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Ludacris chicken n beer vk
Ludacris chicken n beer vk











It's a three minute, hookless song with Ludacris dropping hilarious joke after hilarious joke. In Rob Quarters Skit, Ludacris announces that one of his 62 year old protégés is dropping an album called "Get Hard or Die Trying." Hip Hop Quotables is when Ludacris is at his peak. He uses comic relief in his songs to change pace. Have you ever heard him use humor in any of his songs? He is all serious all the time. Just take a glance at 50 Cent for a second. Rappers that take themselves too seriously get tiresome quickly. While most rappers stick to the same style of flow throughout the album, it seems like Ludacris could use any style and still pull it off perfectly. It is a moderately fast place, and he also uses this flow seamlessly. On the next song, Stand Up, he uses his "regular" style of flow. But he maintains a good steady pace throughout the song, executing that style of flow flawlessly. The next song, Blow It Out, he has a very slow flow. His flow on that song is extremely fast, but he never pronounces a rhyme wrong or stumbles over a word. He can flow incredibly fast, as shown in Dirty South Intro. I can't say for sure that he is the most skilled rapper in the game right now, but he is the best that I have heard. Ludacris is the most skilled mainstream rapper that is still active. However, there is one jewel that lays buried in that mess. Unfortunately, the first image that comes to many people's mind when the Dirty South is mentioned is Mike Jones repeating his name constantly and Paul Wall's icy grill. There are barely any rappers with any rhyming skill that reside in the south. He may not be ready for that Pepsi spot (much less a shot at prime time), but Ludacris made the best record of his career with Chicken -N- Beer.Southern rap is a disaster.

#Ludacris chicken n beer vk full

The steamy sex rap "Stand Up" may be the hit single, but most of the highlights here come toward the end, where Luda invites friends and family for some uproarious tracks - producer Erick Sermon on the surrealist dozens of "Hip Hop Quotables," Snoop Dogg on a hilarious tale of the night after the show, "Hoes in My Room" (as in "Who let these hoes in my room?"), and Disturbing tha Peace partners Chingy, I-20, and Tity Boi on the hardcore gunshot "We Got." Ludacris also has a response for the doubters, on the first full track ("Blow It Out"), proclaiming, "If you mad I'm on top, then wish me gone/If you mad I'm on the road, then wish me home/And if you mad that I'm right, punk, wish me wrong/But after your third wish, blow it out your ass." And, as expected, he gets in a few digs at Bill O'Reilly, the FOX News personality who objected to him as a "thug rapper" when hired for a Pepsi ad campaign (apparently, O'Reilly is the culprit behind "Hoes in My Room"). That he's able to harness all this to his usual rollicking, all-in-good-fun persona is a testament to the best rapper in the business, one of the few who's actually celebrating something - and having a great time doing it. Chicken -N- Beer, his third album (to go along with dozens of guest spots), shows a rapper balancing the weed, women, and fried chicken with shots at those who've crossed him and a look at a few celebrity perils, delivered with his lightning-quick phrasing and cutting wit. Audacious on his rhymes and indulgent with his appetites, Ludacris may flaunt the cartoonish side of his personality, but he isn't just another unreconstructed Southern rapper.











Ludacris chicken n beer vk