Search - Ghostface Killah :: Bulletproof Wallets

Bulletproof Wallets
Ghostface Killah
Bulletproof Wallets
Genres: Pop, Rap & Hip-Hop
 
  •  Track Listings (16) - Disc #1

As the only Wu-Tang MC (outside of the GZA) to not record a lackluster solo release, Ghosface's third album comes with sky-high expectations. Ghostface continues to flow out of a sense of urgency, his cadence dripping with...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Ghostface Killah
Title: Bulletproof Wallets
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Sony
Release Date: 11/20/2001
Album Type: Explicit Lyrics
Genres: Pop, Rap & Hip-Hop
Styles: East Coast, Gangsta & Hardcore, Pop Rap
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 074646158920

Synopsis

Amazon.com
As the only Wu-Tang MC (outside of the GZA) to not record a lackluster solo release, Ghosface's third album comes with sky-high expectations. Ghostface continues to flow out of a sense of urgency, his cadence dripping with emotion on hot RZA-produced numbers like "Maxine." Ghost's exceptional storytelling abilities are intact; on "Never Be the Same" he confronts a former lover with Carl Thomas crooning on the hook. Likewise, on the awesome Alchemist-produced "The Forest" he builds a rhyme around popular fairy-tale characters. While sloppy hooks plague tracks like "Theodore" and "The Jucks" (pop your collar, huh?), it's the inane interlude skits and wildly uneven production that bogs down this release. By album's end you get the vintage Wu sound on "The Hilton"--grimy beats matched by Ghost's intense flow--and "Street Chemistry" boasts a remarkable piano loop mixed in with a sampled female voice, but it all comes a little too late. --Dalton Higgins

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CD Reviews

Ghost
MgiB | Slc, UT | 09/24/2006
(3 out of 5 stars)

"This is an average album. there are some decent songs and the production is okay. Probably for die hard ghost fans.

rating C+"
Bulletproof Wallets: The Downfall
Kunal Vaghela | UK | 05/18/2006
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Unlike many others in Hip-Hop, Ghost should be forgiven for this, but yet again, his versitility and intensity is what makes up for this particular record. Ghost has always been the clansman to bring emotional rage with his rapstyle, this showcases one of his best, on cuts like "Maxine", and also his storytelling are still unparellel on "Never Be The Same Again" and also using cartoon characters to build an entertaining tale on the "Alchemist" produced "The Forest" (think "Ice Cube's" Gangsta's Fairytale with a twist). The album that made this album crash and burn was the production work, it seemed uneven and didn't really seem to fit in well. However even Ghost's worst efforts come off better than most rappers of this decade."