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YoungBloodZ - Ev'rybody Know Me (CD)

Ev'rybody Know Me
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5 out of 5.0 stars 1 Rating (0 Reviews)

Album Details: Ev'rybody Know Me

Release Date:12/13/2005
Label:La Face
UPC:828767317526

Pro Reviews: Ev'rybody Know Me

  • All Music Guide

    Drankin' Patnaz, the 2002 YoungBloodZ album, arrived right in the midst of the initial crunk uprising, and it helped push that style into mass public consciousness in a major way, with the Lil Jonproduced "Damn" breaking into the Top Five of Billboard's Hot 100 a noteworthy milestone at the time. But three years later, in 2005, "crunk" had become the new "blingbling" a trendy rap style that proliferated at lightning speed, to the point where its sudden omnipresence reached the point of parody, not to mention cliché, and indeed, snarkier pop culture commentators were quick to lampoon it just as they had "blingbling." That's when you know a trend is beginning to get carried away, when it increasingly becomes a joke to people who know nothing about it. You know, like when soccer moms use the term with a smirk, to embarrass their teenage daughters. Ev'rybody Know Me arrived around this time, in December 2005, and it pales in comparison to its predecessor. What a difference three years ma...ke YoungBloodZ haven't changed much in those three years. They're still the same rambunctious Atlanta duo they were before witty, grimacing Dirty South rappers with a taste for cush and candypaint cars, white Ts and white wheels, purple and pussy, drank and stank. No, they haven't changed. But while they sounded cutting edge in 2002, they sound middle of the pack in 2005, and that's despite working with many of the same producers as last time. Of course, there's a mammoth Lil Jon production here that stands head and shoulders above every other song on Ev'rybody Know Me: "Presidential." From the opening synth stab, it's obvious that this is straight from the lab of the King of Crunk. There's a lot that's amazing about this song, from how YoungBloodZ make "George Bush" seem like a dope name to drop ("What we smokin'?/That cush/Presidential sht/George Bush") to how Lil Jon's endlessly recycled production style remains powerful. But there are 15 other songs here, and none of them comes close to matching the appeal of "Presidential." Not even Alist producers such as Scott Storch, Jazze Pha, Mannie Fresh, or Mr. Collipark can conjure up a fresh song idea. Rather, each of these wellpaid producers turns in a thirdrate retread: Collipark's "It's Good" sounds like a "Wait (The Whisper Song)" remix, Fresh's "What tha Biz (If I)" sounds like a "And Then What" remix, and so on. The exception would be Storch's "Chop Chop," which does sound fairly unique; it just doesn't quite work as well as it should. Anyhow, there's not a lot of use in overexamining why Ev'rybody Know Me feels disappointing. In sum, it's a runofthemill crunk album with a killer single, an album that doesn't come close to matching its relatively superb and much fresher predecessor. - Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

YoungBloodZ

At Atlanta's Miller Grove Middle School, two young wannabe rappers met up with each other, left their individual rap crews, and joined forces to become Youngbloodz. Sean Paul, who claims that rapping is second nature and easier than conversation, and J-Bo, the DJ of the two, were heavily tied in with the Atlanta rap/production posse known as the Attic. While they honed ... Read more