| | Juvenile Reality Check CD Juvenile Discography of CDs
(67 Customer Reviews)
 |
|
Our Price: $11.69 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
|  |
This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. Personnel: Juvenile (rap vocals); Brian McKnight (vocals); Skip, 8Ball, Fat Joe, Kango, Ludacris, Mike Jones , Paul Wall , Redd Eyezz, Wacko, Trey Songz, Bun B (rap vocals). "Keeping it real" has long since become a cliché in hip-hop vernacular, but New Orleans-based gangsta rapper Juvenile doesn't really know any other way to keep it. While the former Hot Boys MC rose to prominence on the Crescent City's Cash Money label, 2006's REALITY CHECK finds him on a major with his street credentials fully intact. In fact, Juvenile is as angry and brash here as ever, saving his most blunt lyrical cudgels for the Bush administration and post-Katrina politico hustlers. The album's three singles--"Animal," "Rodeo," and "Get Ya Hustle On"--already make REALITY CHECK a winner, but the rest of the disc holds up to the promise of those stand-out tracks. Since his last full-length, Juvenile's situation changed in so many ways. He topped Billboard with the single "Slow Motion," he had a not-so-friendly split with his label, Cash Money, and then Hurricane Katrina and its grim aftermath hit his New Orleans home hard, destroying his house and scattering friends and family across the country. There was also a three-single build-up to the album, with the raw mixtape hit "Animal" setting the streets on fire and the smooth "Rodeo" keeping radio happy before "Get Ya Hustle On" and its accompanying video painted the rapper as New Orleans' most militant revolutionary, with Bush, Cheney, and Nagin all in his sights. Folks who caught the edited version of the song missed out on Juvy's true assessment of the situation, which is basically that FEMA and the rest of the government have forgotten the Crescent City, so pushing crack is the way to step up and provide. Whether or not the powers that be edited the word "Pyrex" out of the tune because they felt it was product placement or were aware it was slang for a crack pipe, the track is a bleak party number that's irresponsible while also being a stunning breakaway hit that brings into question whether or not the big corporations pimping it are now comfortable with crack dealing or totally unaware of how street-slang/street-life has progressed. The rest of the album is nowhere near as subversive, but Juvenile has constructed a wonderfully varied collection with club tracks, street burners, and even "one for the ladies." "Addicted," with smooth crooner Brian McKnight, is the blueprint for delivering a bedroom number without selling out, while all the previous hits sound even better here, surrounded by album tracks that are inspired. Special mention goes to "I Know You Know," which is a great portrait of domestic life in the hood (Juvy speaking to his woman: "I'm comin' home with a big bag of groceries/And somethin' we can smoke up"), but longtime followers of the man's story should jump right to the end of the album and check his bitter beef track, "Say It to Me Now," which addresses the Cash Money split. Drop the laser anywhere and Juvenile's lyrics are tricky, wry, riveting, but most of all, brutally honest and free of any major-label influence. Love it or be horrified by it, there's no denying that the album's title is as accurate as they come. ~ David JeffriesRolling Stone (p.62) - 3.5 stars out of 5 -- "[T]he fire in this enraged Cajun's gut results in a fierce, focused album." Reality Check Music | List Price | $18.98 (You save $7.29) | | Category | Rock/Pop Albums, R&B CDs, Urban Soundtrack, Gangsta, Rap, Enhanced CD, DualDisc | | Label | Atlantic | | Orig Year | 2006 | | All Time Sales Rank | 13319  | | CD Universe Part number | 6900799 | | Catalog number | 83790 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Mar 07, 2006 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Producer | Terius Gray; Corey Gray | | Personnel | Juvenile - rap vocals
Also: Ludacris, Bun B, Trey Songz, Brian Mcknight, Fat Joe, Eightball, Paul Wall, Mike Jones, Skip, Redd Eyezz, Wacko, Kango Slim |
Juvenile Reality Check Songs Reality Check Music Review Average Rating: (4.1 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews JUVES BEST ALBUM i forsure thought this was his best album my fav juvie albums are the g code then 400 degreez this cd is great from song one to the last its all killer no filler forsure juvie killed this album from the beats to his flows are tight and its not 16 tracks of bling bling and how much money he has like 400 degreez Submitted by travis (merlin,oregon,USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 1 found this helpful.
Great This is a great cd. Submitted by roscoe0620032003 (stillwater, ok)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Good Album, but not 400 DEGREEZ I really liked this cd, great production all around, nice collaberations, still has that Juvenile Type music on it. This album is one of his best. The only track that kinda buggs me is tha one with Brian McKnight. Its funny but, it really wasnt needed. Overall I give it a 4, but I dont think he can ever achieve 400 degreez ( 5 ***** ) without manny fresh. Still, u should get it Submitted by ripjr313 (D rock city)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Aight u did it I gave u 4 stars 'cause i didnt like all of them but the only 1 that i was lookin 4 was "Whats happenin". The other songs r good as well... But this 1 with real beats.. keep it up, heat it up! Submitted by Uzbek (Forest Hills, NY, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
best rap album in a while Juvenile did it up on this one. 2 bad he included paul wall and mike jones but it only one song. good stuff Submitted by chico (Detroit) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
 List All Reviews | Have you heard this album? |  |
Purchase Reality Check CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart
|