The Boss of Miami

The Boss of Miami

Port of Miami (Audio CD)

Customer Review

Miami has never been one of the major cities when it comes to Hip Hop. The most famous people from the Biz should be star-Producer Cool & Dre and the Slip-N-Slide rapper Trick Daddy and Trina. 2006 then entered a new stage MC. His name: Rick Ross. Directed by Def Jam and Slip-N-Silde Records brought this with his debut "Port of Miami" an album that set new standards for Vice City. His trademark is his rough and distinctive voice, which he uses to tell stories in the very finest fashion mafia, which just wonderful to Miami fits, a city that brims with illegalities. Already the very first Banger "Push It" is an anthem for his hometown. The instrumental comes from Jonathan "JR" Rothem which it used samples from "Scarface" soundtrack. A brilliant '80s gangster film set in Miami, beautifully reissued by Rick Ross. Even better I like "Blow", which comes from the hands of Cool & Dre. The beat is very electric, fast and with a lot of power, to Rick raps just awesome with his wicked voice. Most likely the smash "Hustlin '" know. A properly coarse midtempo piece with gescrewtem Hook ("I'm hustlin Ev'ryday '"), what one's otherwise rather knows from Houston, meets a rapper who can shine with casual and quiet Rhymes. Even better is the associated end remix with Jay-Z and Young Jeezy. Again the theme '80s is "I'm Bad" dedicated. The rapid Instrumental could also be the theme song of a wonderful cult series like "Miami Vice" and "The A-Team", just really cool. The performance of Rick Ross is immaculate and one of the best of the entire album. My absolute favorite is "For Da Low", Jazze Pha for an ingenious production handed in, which is by its many sounds in the background to something unique. Paired with Ross' Rhymes that gives easy with a real bang. Something R'n'B flavor you get with "Get Away" feat. Mario Winans, "Hit U From The Back" feat. Rodney or with "It's My Time" feat. Lyfe Jennings. All of these songs are quite relaxed and bring some variety among the whole hard Banger. Properly fantastic was "Street Life" with Lloyd. The instrumental is fast, still looks sad. The same is true for Rick Ross' verse, the perfect through Lloyd's sung chorus supplemented. At the end of "Port of Miami" is available with "It Is not A Problem" again a real smash your ears. The beat is held in mid-tempo and backed by some Sythie sounds, to rap Ross and his crew, the Carol City Cartel, really good. By and large, was as good as any song a hit. Even the gloomy "Cross That Line" with Akon, the chilling "Boss" with Dre, Gangster-track "White House", Smoker-chill song "Pots and Pans" with J rock or the hard "I'm AG" Lil Wayne and Brisco are really good and can be heard through without skipping. With a lot of support from famous Producern and rappers Rick Ross is with his debut succeeded not only the best album of the Slip-N-Slide history, but probably the best ever album in Miami's Hip Hop history. Anyone who is on good Dirty South Rap from sunny Florida and also to somewhat exaggerated Mob Stories nothing has objected, should absolutely access here.

Perfect January 1715 Rank: 5/5
January 26
Perfect! January 2316 Rank: 5/5
January 4
Good product 1352 Rank: 4/5
September 14
Beautiful product 82 Rank: 3/5
July 25