To speak in connection with this album from a classic, it seems to me then but a bit exaggerated. So that we do not get me wrong, Bun B provides a really successful work from. The bar is placed at the beginning of the song 'Get Throwed' & 'Draped Up' insanely high. Here I would even speak of 2-bred Southern classics!
This level can not be maintained but in the long run of the album. Pieces such as 'Bun', 'I'm Fresh' or 'I'm Ballin' are indeed fundamentally sound but they lack the last conviction.
Moreover, Bun thematically slightly rotates in a circle. This makes really fun times ('Pushin') and sometimes less ('Who Need A B'). Summits do the whole thing in the song 'Trill Recognize Trill' on which Bun and Ludacris for my taste too much self Beweihräuchern.
Too bad, it's only just the personal moments that are the album to shame. So B is on the track 'The Story' but very intimate insight into the history of UGK. Musically and guests can default the album harm. The southern prominence ensures both the microphone (including Young Jeezy, Scarface, Lil Keke, Z-RO, Ludacris, Baby, Mike Jones, Juvenile), as well as behind the controls (including Mannie Fresh, Jazze Pha, Lil Jon, Colli Park) for a more than worthy setting. But it is precisely the main protagonist is a total of a little too short, which occupy just 3 solo tracks.
In the final part, the pendulum swings with 'Git It' (the better 'Wait') and the Houston A-League remix of 'Draped Up' again clearly upwards.
Conclusion: Very successful solo debut with lots of light and little shade. Especially friends of dirty South will fully get their costs. Best songs: "Get Throwed ',' Draped Up ',' Pushin '&' The Story '.