Track Listing 1. Intro - (featuring Ziggler the Wiggler) 2. Geezy Where U Been - (featuring Ziggler the Wiggler) 3. My Life 4. My World "I Want It" 5. Don't Talk to Me 6. Walk With Me - (featuring Gar) 7. Get Wild With It - (featuring Ying Yang Twins) 8. Factory - (featuring Hakim/Gar/Sniper) 9. Do What You Wanna Do - (featuring Six Shot/Big Gipp) 10. Right Now 11. Street N***a - (featuring T.I.) 12. Rolling in My Cadillac 13. I Wanna F*ck - (featuring Hakim/Gar/Sniper/Conrad) 14. Don't Wanna Be With Out U - (featuring Gar/Real) 15. Like That - (featuring Soulja Slim) 16. Hold That Thought 17. Doing My Thang 18. Bust a Move - (featuring Gar)
| Details | | Contributing Artists: | B.G., Big Gipp, Conrad, Gar, Hakim, Real, Six Shot, Sniper, Soulja Slim, T.I., Ying Yang Twings, Ying Yang Twins, Ziggler The Wiggler | | Producer: | Base Heavy, C Los Beats, Carlos Stephens, Crack Tracks, Dani Kartel, G Sta, Hush, Jeanie Perkins, Jeffrey Johns, Johnny Kidd, KLC, Kidd, Law, Michael "DJ Smurf" Crooms, Michael Crooms, Sinista, Speedy | | Distributor: | E1 Distribution (USA) | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Personnel: B.G.; Nathan Hughes (percussion); Conrad, Gar, Hakim , Real, Soulja Slim, Ying Yang Twins, Big Gipp, Ziggler the Wiggler, Six Shot. Audio Mixers: KLC; Base Heavy; C Los Beats; Zone; Quentin Dennard. B.G.'s rapping skills made serious revenue for the legendary Cash Money label before he was a teenager (and before there was much of a Cash Money label of which to speak). On 2004's LIFE AFTER CASH MONEY, B.G. sounds like someone who's moved beyond his origins, with easy vocals gliding over magnificent Dirty South beats. Although he makes it clear that he's no longer affiliated with the record company with which he was practically synonymous in the 1990s (this is his second record for Koch Records), B.G. still brandishes a hard-edged style that doesn't break for a second. Like many rappers in the southern states, B.G. blends a sense of humor with a darker worldview, and occasionally leans towards the violent landscapes of the Geto Boys. Nowhere do the two sides mix with more awesome chaos than on the anthemic "Factory." B.G. displays his prowess both in lyrical potency and dizzying swagger while throwing in a shout to his past on the crawling "My World I Want It.'" He also proves he can change gears effectively on the semi-lewd, '70s-inspired, funk-infused ballad "Bust a Move." B.G. doesn't miss a beat as he slides into his new existence on LIFE AFTER CASH MONEY.
Editorial Reviews 3 stars out of 5 - [T]his disc bounces along as effortlessly as a typical Hot Boys record... Rolling Stone
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