| | Game Black Wall Street Journal CD - Import Game Discography of CDs
Black Wall Street Journal Music | List Price | $22.99 (You save $2.00) | | Category | Rap Albums | | Label | Phantom | | All Time Sales Rank | 292226  | | CD Universe Part number | 7471791 | | Catalog number | 700161 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Jul 10, 2007 |
Game Black Wall Street Journal Songs | 1. | We Out Here - feat.The Game,Clyde Carson,Ya Boy,Juice | |
| 2. | A - Various Artists | |
| 3. | Be Eazy - feat.The Game,Ya Boy,Juice&Mary J Blige | |
| 4. | So High - feat.The Game,Ya Boy&Juice | |
| 5. | Who Got The Juice Now - feat.Juice&The Game | |
| 6. | Hustla - feat.Cyssero The Virus,Clyde Carson&Akon | |
| 7. | Back 2 Back - feat.The Game&Jayo Felony | |
| 8. | 100 Bars Of Crack - feat.Ya Boy | |
| 9. | Lights Camera Action - feat.The Game,Clyde Carson&Snoop Dogg | |
| 10. | 24's - feat.Clyde Carson | |
| 11. | What's Beef - feat.The Game&Ya Boy | |
| 12. | Juice Interlude - Juice | |
| 13. | Rollin - feat.Juice&The Game | |
| 14. | Hurricanes - feat.The Game,Ya Boy&Juice | |
| 15. | I'm A Rider - feat.Cyssero The Virus | |
| 16. | Hustla Music - feat.The Game,Dubb&Clyde Carson | |
| 17. | Cypha - feat.The Game,Ya Boy,Jay Rock,K Dot, The | |
| 18. | Fire In Ya Eyes - feat.The Game,Ya Boy&Cyssero The Virus | |
| Black Wall Street Journal Review
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$11.39 Vinyl LP version also available directly from the label at whatmusic Soho, London, in the late 80Õs was a hotbed of specialist record stores and small time dealers Ð the "bag menÕ who would carry around a record bag full of rarities and move from shop to coffee house meeting up with buyers, sellers, and anyone who shared their huge passion for music. The archetypal London of the swinging sixties and sexually ambiguous seventies had given way to a money orientated materialism across the capital, but in Soho, the music lovers were unaffected and to fuel their passion, turned to the exotic and real rhythms of Brasil and the rich Jazz sounds from all corners of the world. There were all sorts of colourful characters there in soho, the dodgy dealers that would swear this £150 record was the last they had, and a huge rarity, despite the fact they had another 40 of them round the back. There were the travellers, who would trek off to Brazil and take buses down long dusty roads to distant towns to find the most sought-after titles and bring them back, often on-demand, to the dealers in Soho. There were the passionate customers, who would rather buy a record than eat if they were down to their last funds. There were the shop-owners, who often had to rely on the Dealers to tell them what to buy. There were the DJs who would be the first to buy a new discovery, playing it on the dancefloor until everybody wanted one. There were the merely curious, who hung around just because they loved being in the buzz and the excitement, and of course there were the foreigners, who came to Soho from the four corners of the earth, who mixed and mingled with the locals and who made Soho such an exciting place to be.The most famous of the record dealers by the mid 90Õs was a man named John Cooper. While everyone else would have record bags full of £10 or £20 vinyls, John could always be counted on to have a £500 or £1,000 record of near mythical proportions in his. He was looked up to like a God by the other dealers, and there was always a buzz when he opened his bag. John was and is, a walking encyclopaedia. If you give him the name of the most rare title you know, he can tell you the musicians, ...
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Black Wall Street Journal CD music
$10.15 Noting influences from his family, his lifestyle and learning the business to what ever parameter, Kentucky's G-Mack has a story to tell. After shifting through disappointments, obstacles and set backs of the past, his present days are much sweeter. Progressing and regaining his composure, he pushed 3,500 units as a self-made artist along with production credits that are quite impressive. This is just a taste of G-Mack's brighter days. Up until fifteen, G-Mack was your typical teen. He was into sports, rapping, video games, girls, etc. It wasn't until he was sixteen that his life started to do a 360. Due to the fact that his mom, step dad, brother, and sister were hustling and a few of his friends were already hustling, and all of his favorite rappers were talking about hustling in their music, hustling was basically a no-brainer. G-Mack tried to keep his street life from contaminating his school life; but the bigger problems became at home, the more serious his hustle had to become. Mack's responsibilities changed dramatically with in a matter of months. Having just enough money to buy a new pair of shoes and decent clothing wasn't going to cut it anymore. Trying to juggle two lifestyles led to what G-Mack said was the worst thing that ever happened to him - he got kicked out of school. Everything seemed to go down hill from there. His mother took sick to the point she couldn't work; his brother and step dad went to jail and his girlfriend moved back to Chicago. He also found out that he had a set of twins on the way and a little girl that could possibly be his, and to top it all off he was facing attempted murder charges that ended up being dismissed. In the midst of dealing with these series of bad happenings, G-Mack obtained his G.E.D. and enrolled himself into college. With the judge seeing potential in Mack, he was granted a school release that allowed him to attend college during the day and sit behind bars at night. It was during this season of his life that he started to record his first album; and he hasn't looked back since. Two years into his business management degree, G-Mack quit school with the intent to capitalize in his music career. He first ran into a bad record deal that resulted in him starting his own independent ...
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For Sale Pre-Order Now! Available: Tuesday, January 26, 2010
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