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Savage Life 2 [Clean] [Edited] [PA]

Webbie
Release Date: 02/26/2008
Original Release:  2008
# of Discs:   1
J&R Item # 1017132_CD
UPC # 075678995231
Label: Asylum (USA)
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Track Details Credits Reviews Artist Related Shipping
Disc: 1
1. 2 Smooth sound samples  real  |  windows media
2. Six 12's - (featuring Mouse on Tha Track) sound samples  real  |  windows media
3. Independent - (featuring Lil' Phat/Lil' Boosie) sound samples  real  |  windows media
4. I Know - (featuring Young Dro) sound samples  real  |  windows media
5. Just Like Me sound samples  real  |  windows media
6. Thuggin' - (featuring Lil' Phat/Lil' Boosie/Shell) sound samples  real  |  windows media
7. I'm Hot sound samples  real  |  windows media
8. You a Trip - (featuring Big Head) sound samples  real  |  windows media
9. Just Like This - (featuring Big Head) sound samples  real  |  windows media
10. Miracle, A - (featuring Rick Ross/Birdman) sound samples  real  |  windows media
11. I'm Ready sound samples  real  |  windows media
12. I Miss You - (featuring LeToya Luckett) sound samples  real  |  windows media
13. Doe Doe - (featuring Lil' Phat/Bun B) sound samples  real  |  windows media
14. Fly as an Eagle - (featuring Foxx/Pimp C) sound samples  real  |  windows media
15. Ya'll Ain't Makin' No Money sound samples  real  |  windows media
16. First Night - (featuring Mouse) sound samples  real  |  windows media

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Performer: Webbie
Artist: Mouse On Tha Track; Lil' Phat; Lil' Boosie; Young Dro; Shell; Big Head; Rick Ross; BirdMan; Letoya Luckett; Bun B; Foxx; Pimp C
Engineer: Howard White; Victor Flores; Big Duke
Producer: Mouse On Tha Track; Mannie Fresh
Distributor: WEA (Distributor)

Notes: Personnel: Tyree Neal (guitar). Audio Mixers: David West; Victor Flores. After a three-year hiatus, Trill Entertainment's Webbie returns in 2008 with SAVAGE LIFE 2, the simply named sequel to his acclaimed debut. On the opening single, "Independent," the Baton Rouge MC sics his southern drawl on a song that's both a sincere ode to powerful women and a seriously narcotic grit-crunk beat. The track is the perfect sampling of an album rife with intelligent lyrics and stirring if comfortably familiar beats. Highlights of SAVAGE LIFE 2 include the sinister, low-end hopping "Six 12's" and the guitar-riff-centered anthem, "I'm Hot." In 2008, putting a "2" on the cover of your album meant little in the world of hip-hop. The implication that it meant "sequel" had been abused by a long line of albums where "2" just meant "we hope it sells as much as the first." Webbie's follow-up to the first, very successful Savage Life should have dropped the numeral altogether because here the rapper sounds much sharper and significantly more mature. His mouth is still foul, his ego is still huge, and his allegiance to the game -- plus all the misogyny that comes with it -- is still strong, but there's little doubt that Webbie wants more than just hit singles. In an effort to balance the album, the usual hooky club tracks like the horribly infectious "Independent" mix with deeper, more ambitious numbers like "Just Like This" where the paradox of hood stardom is explored. On one hand there's the sleeping with beautiful women and the stacks of money. On the other there's the shotgun under the bed and the mean streets to which millionaire Webbie must remain connected in order to stay credible. While a top-shelf MC could add insight and answers, Webbie is at least able to offer vivid, eye-level views of his situation now that he's upped his lyrical game. Executive producers Turk and Mel waste none of this progress and enlist an A-list set of guest stars -- Bun B, Rick Ross, and the late Pimp C, just to name a few -- plus beatmakers with Mannie Fresh and B-Real supplementing the work of the Trill label's own Mouse on tha Track. ~ David Jeffries In 2008, putting a "2" on the cover of your album meant little in the world of hip-hop. The implication that it meant "sequel" had been abused by a long line of albums where "2" just meant "we hope it sells as much as the first." Webbie's follow-up to the first, very successful Savage Life should have dropped the numeral altogether because here the rapper sounds much sharper and significantly more mature. His mouth is still foul, his ego is still huge, and his allegiance to the game -- plus all the misogyny that comes with it -- is still strong, but there's little doubt that Webbie wants more than just hit singles. In an effort to balance the album, the usual hooky club tracks like the horribly infectious "Independent" mix with deeper, more ambitious numbers like "Just Like This" where the paradox of hood stardom is explored. On one hand there's the sleeping with beautiful women and the stacks of money. On the other there's the shotgun under the bed and the mean streets to which millionaire Webbie must remain connected in order to stay credible. While a top-shelf MC could add insight and answers, Webbie is at least able to offer vivid, eye-level views of his situation now that he's upped his lyrical game. Executive producers Turk and Mel waste none of this progress and enlist an A-list set of guest stars -- Bun B, Rick Ross, and the late Pimp C, just to name a few -- plus beatmakers with Mannie Fresh and B-Real supplementing the work of the Trill label's own Mouse on tha Track. [A clean version of the album was also released.] ~ David Jeffries
Pitchfork (Website) - "Webbie certainly sounds like he's done some growing up since his debut. It shows on 'Independent,' the albums lead single and one of the year's most refreshing jams."
Baton Rouge, Louisiana MC Webbie was barely into his teens when, paired with Lil Boosie, he signed a deal with Trill Entertainment in 2001. Just three years later, the drawl-voiced rapper scored a crossover hit with "Give Me That" off his heralded debut SAVAGE LIFE. Featured tracks on mixtapes stoked the excitement over a sequel which finally dropped in 2008. Webbie's ability to sneak shockingly deft rhymes in the middle of bass-heavy, dance-ready hip-hop separates him from the crowded pack of Southern rap.
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