Like Father, Like Son [Edited] [Limited]Birdman (Rap)
Release Date: 10/31/2006
Original Release:
2006
# of Discs:
2
J&R Item # 941017_CD
UPC # 602517085107
Label: Universal Distribution
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Disc: 1
2.
Over Here Hustlin'
Disc: 2
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Birdman (Rap)
Distributor: Universal Distribution Notes: Personnel: Birdman ; Lil Wayne; Daz, Fat Joe, Rick Ross , Kurupt, T-Pain, Cashville. In addition to building one of the most successful empires in the Dirty South, Cash Money Records CEO Bryan Williams also releases records under the moniker Birdman. On LIKE FATHER LIKE SON, the third Birdman album, Williams is joined by Cash Money break-out Lil Wayne, and together they turn out a hardcore rap album in the grand tradition of Nawlins crunk. Rolling, mid-tempo beats tailor-made for pumping through jeep speakers power the disc while Birdman and Lil Wayne spit rhymes about hustling, smoking, making money, and gangsta living. Fans of Cash Money artists are sure to get their hardcore funk on with this one. Cash Money's rise and fall has been talked to death, but it's important to note that the 2006 collaboration between Birdman (Cash Money CEO) and Lil Wayne (Birdman's "surrogate son" and Cash Money's president) lands while the label is on the upswing. Critically, they're doing better than ever, respected in a way they weren't back when they had Juvenile and Mannie Fresh. The biggest reason of all is Lil Wayne's Tha Carter 2, so Birdman bumps him up to president and suddenly the rapper who was evolving with more complex lyrics, strange vocal rhythms, and risky production choices is creative director of the label that used be the down-low dirty-dirty. Like Father, Like Son is a celebration of Wayne and Cash Money's success, a testament to the allegiance the two feel toward each other, and most likely a way for Birdman to set Wayne on the right path as label boss. When it came to singles, Tha Carter 2 stalled after the leadoff "Fireman," so it's no big surprise this album is filled with hooks, infectious beats, and that trunk-rumbling weekend music Cash Money was built on. Synthesized horns blast out "Stuntin' Like My Daddy"'s triumphant melody, while the instantly gripping "Know What I'm Doing" works because it's keep-it-simple-stupid swagger music like the Big Tymers used to kick. Birdman might be reinforcing what Cash Money was built on, but he's well aware of his boy's talent and gives the freedom-craving, forward-looking baller adequate room to roam. The woozy "Leather So Soft" had to be Wayne's idea, "Army Gunz" features one of his most broken deliveries yet, and on the title track he offers, "I'll put you niggas in the closet in the shirt space/Niggas yellow like Sesame Street's Bert face." Production comes primarily from TMIX -- the UGK-sampling "1st Key" is his masterwork -- although Scott Storch stops by for the so-so "You Ain't Know," a great argument the beat-maker is spread too thin in his prolific 2006. The mix of familiar and strange is fascinating, the team-up feels like family, and at 20 tracks long, the album doesn't wear out its welcome. There's probably too much get money/stack-paper for those who want Wayne to speak on the injustices New Orleans has suffered post-Katrina, or to get to work on Tha Carter 3, but that's not what Like Father, Like Son is about. This is the sure sound of Cash Money steadying the ship and getting back on course. ~ David Jeffries
Rolling Stone (p.114) - 3.5 stars out of 5 -- "Lil' Wayne and Birdman make a strong, defiant statement with this joint project, armed with hard-hitting rhymes build around the themes of loyalty, family and redemption."
Rolling Stone (p.106) - Ranked #31 in Rolling Stone's "The Top 50 Albums Of 2006" -- "[T]wo of the label's biggest names were able to reinvigorate a familiar sound..."
XXL (Magazine) (p.151) - "With solid production throughout, Wayne's ever-evolving sentence structure and Baby's uncanny swagger..."
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Similar Genres:
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