DE AFARĂ: Prodigy & Boogz Boogetz - Young Rollin Stonerz (2014)

YRS 4PAN1T

Mobb Deep member Prodigy partners with Boogz Boogetz for the forthcoming "Young Rollin Stonerz" project.

Prodigy and Boogz Boogetz have partnered for the Young Rollin Stonerz album, which is slated for a November 25 release on Infamous Records, according to a press release.

One-half of Mobb Deep, Prodigy said during a March interview with HipHopDX that Mobb Deep has a plan to remain relevant.

"What we learned is that we just gotta keep doing what we do. It’s pretty much the same thing that we’ve been learning this whole time,” he said at the time. "We got our own lane, and nobody creates music like us. We got a certain style of music that nobody else can do, and we basically got our own lane. We got to stick to it and just keep doing what we doing. We been through a lot of changes, trends and eras in Rap music. We’ve seen rappers come and go and seen groups come and go. From fashion, production styles—everything, you name—we seen multiple changes in music. We been through it, so it’s like, we already know what to do to survive and [maintain] the same relevance many years later. The quality of music is still the same, and we basically stick to our guns and our formula. That’s what we learned. We continue to learn and just do us. It doesn’t matter what trends or rappers do this or do that. Who gives a fuck? We seen all of that already. This ain’t new to us. It’s new to them."

Boogz Boogetz released the DJ Khaled-hosted Far Rockaways Most Wanted mixtape in 2010. It featured Ace Hood, Kid Ink, Wiz Khalifa. He has also collaborated extensively with Prodigy.

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Tracklist:


01. Queens
02. Next Level
03. Money & Power
04. Pass Me
05. 40 Oz
06. P.I.M.P.
07. Scarface
08. Clouds
09. Young Rollin Stonerz
10. Ain't Real (feat. KC Da Beatmonster)
11. Motion Picture

VIA http://www.hiphopdx.com/index/album-reviews/id.2389/title.prodigy-boogz-boogetz-young-rollin-stonerz:

"Young Rollin' Stonerz" features a "Cheech & Chong" dynamic, and makes for an entertaining collaboration filled with half-baked cruising music.

Infamous Records continues to build in 2014. In April, Mobb Deep reasserted themselves in the game when they dropped The Infamous Mobb Deep. Now, Havoc and Prodigy have each dropped solo efforts to cap off the year. On Young Rollin Stonerz, Prodigy teamed up with fellow NYC rapper, up-and-coming Far Rockaway native Boogz Boogetz.

The album is sort of a passing of the torch: Prodigy, a legend 20 years in the making, dabbles in synths and Trap-inclined beats, alongside Boogz, who fancies the contemporary Rap trends, but is also stylistically rooted in the streets the same way Mobb Deep was and still is. It’s a gratifying collaboration for fans and the two emcees alike: an artist and his young apprentice inspiring each other.

At eleven songs and clocking in at roughly 39 minutes, the album is playfully curt. Prodigy and Boogz take turns opening and closing, and shine for different reasons. Prodigy is a blunt orator and doesn’t mince words. On “40 Oz,” he raps: “We gettin’ all this breeze / Top down, turnt up / Ghostface Killah ‘Black Shampoo’ my word up / This shit is real phat, niggas stuck in the ‘90s / I’m so 2020 I can’t see behind me.” Rather cleverly, he acknowledges the notion of making music now versus the 1990s. Twenty years have passed since The Infamous, and Prodigy isn’t thinking about the good ol’ days; the game has changed and he’s adapting.

Boogz, meanwhile, is aptly navigating his way through the on trent “turnt” styles of today. His style is what makes this duo so interesting when you look at them side by side. On “Clouds,” he spits: “Look, I’m a live it up / Put the piff in rotation / Had to switch it up to a different location / Pockets so fat I be throwin’ racks / Shorty make that ass clap like a standing ovation.” He flows both fast and slow, and his more notable moments on the album often reflect his ability to skillfully ride the beats. His delivery and tone of voice separate themselves as his more superior attributes.

Young Rollin Stonerz is also a creative endeavor as far as production goes. Uncharacteristically, Prodigy experiments with rapping over beats that are reminiscent of something by Mike WiLL Made It. The cast of producers is a bit esoteric, but there’s a little bit of something for everyone, and it’s somewhat of a family affair as  Boogz’s father, Drew Skillz, supplies four beats. Yet considering the scope of production, the synths and uptempo snares still prevail as methods of choice. Young Rollin Stonerz isn’t exactly for the true school Mobb Deep fans. Musically, it’s a different approach than what we’ve come to expect from P.

For Prodigy, Young Rollin Stonerz is more of an Indie effort, in that there are no famous guests or producers. The production also stands out for it’s indifference to the Boom Bap sound that molded him into what he is today. As for Boogz, it works amazingly well. And, as far as his career of projects go, this is a watershed moment for the young rapper. But at eleven songs, the better moments of the album aren’t duplicated enough for either artist. The two work well together, though, and it would in both of their interests to keep working together in to the future.

HipHopDinRomania

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