Shopping > Music > Ludacris > Chicken & Beer

Ludacris - Chicken & Beer (CD)

Album Details: Chicken & Beer

Release Date:10/07/2003
Label:Def Jam
UPC:602498605370

Other Available Formats: Chicken & Beer

User Reviews: Chicken & Beer

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    very good

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Oct 8, 2003 | 4 out of 4 found this Chicken & Beer review helpful

    Pros: ludacris overall

    Cons: what happened to the big beats?!

    chicken and beer is a prety good CD. songs like Southern fried intro, stand up,and team work were great, these song have a pretty good beat but the rest did not have that loud car stereo thumpin'bass like in his other CD "Word of Mouf"....which is a shame because like Coming 2 America, and "Get the F*** back",or southern hospitality from his other CD " Back for the first time" were the reasons to buy a great sound system for your car. but anyway Luda is still great and his fast rhymes are excellent! It is Definitely a must buy if you listened and liked his first two CDs. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    this is one of the cds that he made

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Nov 5, 2003 | 2 out of 2 found this Chicken & Beer review helpful

    Pros: love it

    Cons: p poppin

    i really like this cd and the beat keep it rockin luda

Pro Reviews: Chicken & Beer

  • All Music Guide

    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. 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. 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. 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" (a...s 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"). 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. - John Bush, All Music Guide Read more Less

Compare Prices: Chicken & Beer

Store Store Rating Price Notes/Coupons

Barnes and Noble

Write a review

$12.69Total Price N/A New Item members save 10% Go to Store

Amazon.com Marketplace

47 Ratings

(28 Reviews)

Write a review

$2.73Total Price N/A New Item fantastic prices with ease & comfort of amazon Go to Store

Tower Records

51 Ratings

(41 Reviews)

Write a review

$11.19Total Price N/A New Item free us shipping for items over $25!!! Go to Store

Rate & Write a Review: Chicken & Beer

All fields marked with * are required
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
Maximum of 4,000 characters
Cancel

Rate & Write a Review: Chicken & Beer

Thank You. Your review has been posted.
View your postClose

Biography

Ludacris

Ludacris rode the early-2000s Dirty South explosion to widespread popularity, as his songs enjoyed an enormous embrace, mainly by urban media outlets but also MTV and pop radio. The Atlanta-based rapper went from local sensation to household name after Def Jam signed him to its Def Jam South subsidiary in 2000. In addition to connecting him with super-producers like Tim... Read more