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Young Buck - Straight Outta Cashville (CD)

Album Details: Straight Outta Cashville

Release Date:08/24/2004
Label:Interscope Records
UPC:602498629888

Other Available Formats: Straight Outta Cashville

User Reviews: Straight Outta Cashville

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    Realistic artist in beautiful and violent detail.

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Aug 23, 2004 | 15 out of 18 found this Straight Outta Cashville review helpful

    Pros: Great lyrics! Great collaborations!

    Cons: (NONE)

    Young Buck is a young artist representing where he has been and where he hopes to go. The album is richly rooted in the South which many other Southern rappers. That alone earns this album 4 stars. Buck is ferocious in his debut, and he doesn't d...isappoint. As the youngest soldier of G-Unit, he sounds mature with his talent riding over the cause of his purpose. "Black Gloves," "Stomp," and "Let Me In" are classics. "Welcome To The South" and "I'm A Soldier" are excellent too. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    4/5 Album

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Aug 22, 2004 | 3 out of 4 found this Straight Outta Cashville review helpful

    Pros: Gulliness

    Cons: Southern Beats and Rappers

    This album was hot. I give it a 4 outta 5. For a southern rapper, Young Buck has really impressed me. He has shown me that he can go outside of his style and perform on other styles like he did with the G-Unit album. This album to me is definitely by... far the best release from G-Unit Records, and that includes Get Rich or Die Tryin. I was really feeling most of these tracks making this album a banger and must-cop. If you're into the Dirty South style of music, then you will love this. If you're not, I still recommend checking this one out, especially if you are a G-Unit fan (which I'm not). Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Straight Outta Cashville

  • All Music Guide

    Less than 2 months after the solo debut of his GUnit brother Lloyd Banks, Young Buck drops Straight Outta Cashville, another well crafted but uncompromising premiere that expands 50 Cent and crew's empire below the MasonDixon line. Lyrics are often the sameold, sameold GUnit topics weed, the game, Tony Yayo, guns, lots and lots of money talk but this crew has yet to present a rapper that doesn't attack these tired subjects with style and flair. Buck has been graced with 50's ability to bring streetlife to the CD player with that grotesque/flippant delivery. But with none of 50's smirk or Banks' city swagger, Buck is the one to relate to, still struggling, still hungry. The obligatory "how I got here" track, "Look at Me Now", is his best moment lyrically vivid and all that but you can drop the laser anywhere and hear more brain than boast. If that was all there was, Straight Outta Cashville would be a good record. What makes it great is excellent producer and guest rapper choices, a... tight tracklist with nearly perfect flow, and the fresh GUnit meets crunk and Lil Jon sound that dominates the album. He's often outrageously loud, but Lil Jon tones down his Southern beats to thug level on the excellent funkster "Shorty Wanna Ride", one of the deepest jams the producer has come up with. Red Spyda is at the helm for the sticky "Welcome to the South" with David Banner while the infectious "Let Me In" is proof frequent GUnit producer Needlz saved his best for Buck. "Bonafide Huster", "I'm A Soldier", and the Nancy Sinatra sampling "Bang Bang" are more singalong anthems to add to the GUnit mixtapes and nothing on the record out and out fails. If there's anything bad to be said about the album it's that the GUnit machine is way ahead of Buck when it comes to experience and he keeps his personality from coming through loud and clear at times. Adjusting to the fabulous life of the 50 Cent's clique has to be a whirlwind and you can't blame Buck for pulling his punches and coming into his own slowly. There's more to GUnit's most approachable rapper than Straight Outta Cashville gives up, one listen and you'll feel it. Then again, if his "finding himself" takes twenty more phatbottomed crowd pleasers like this to get there, who would mind? - David Jeffries, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Young Buck

To most, rapper Young Buck was a fresh face when he became a member of 50 Cent's crew GUnit, but he spent a long time waiting on the bench before that. The Nashville, TN, native started rapping at 12 and was in a recording studio by 14, the same age he was when he began peddling narcotics. Cash Money's main man, Brian "Baby" Williams, caught a 16yearold Young Buck at a ... Read more