Track Listing 1. Intro - (featuring Erica Fox) 2. Bout Dat - (featuring Silkk The Shocker) 3. Don Is Back 4. Doo Rags - (featuring Slay Sean) 5. "B" I Like 6. My Three Uncles 7. Golds in They Mouth 8. Problems 9. Poppin' Them Collars 10. I Don't Give Ah What 11. Twerk That Thang 12. Life I Live 13. Souljas 14. Real, The 15. Pockets Gone' Stay Fat 16. My Babooski - (featuring Tamar Braxton) 17. Still Ballin' - (featuring Krazy/Slay Sean) 18. Soulja Boo - (featuring Erica Fox) 19. Hush - (featuring Krazy/Slay Sean) 20. Roll How We Roll - (featuring Afficial) 21. Would You - (featuring Krazy) 22. It Don't Get No Better - (featuring Black Felon) 23. Always Come Back to You
| Details | | Contributing Artists: | Afficial, Black Felon, C-Murder, Erica Fox, Krazy, Master P, Mystikal, Silkk The Shocker, Slay Sean, Snoop Dogg, Tamar Braxton | | Distributor: | EMI Music Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Personnel includes: Master P (rap vocals). Producers include: Carlos Stephens, XL, Ezell Swang, Ke-Noe, Suga Bear. Despite his enormous success as a hip-hop entrepreneur, Master P retains enough street credibility throughout GHETTO POSTAGE to erase any lingering doubts about his "keeping it real." His production skills are almost a given, yet one can't help but be impressed by the light synths and slow-churning groove of "Bout Dat" and the syncopated Latin rhythms that percolate throughout "Don is Back." More crucially, though, P manages to simultaneously celebrate his success and keep one foot in the world from which he came. On "Doo Rags," he brags about his "uptown house" and "uptown life" over a rhythm track that owes more than a little to dancehall reggae; on "B I Like," he finds the object of his lust in another man's woman, attempting to sway her with come-ons on the order of "you need a thug in your life." Coming from Master P, one has to assume that such a line has a fair chance of success.
Editorial Reviews 3 stars out of 5 - ...P remains on the job....the music is screwy yet brutally to the point, unpredictable but never flighty....even hood rats occasionally have to swoon. Rolling Stone (12/21/2000)
| See an error? Submit a change request |