Various Artists|Music Inspired By More Than A Game [OST]
September 28, 2009 by SBK · 8 Comments

More Than A Game tells the story of now NBA superstar LeBron James and his fellow teammates during their high school years at St. Vincent-St. Mary High School in Akron, Ohio. It follows the team’s journey of trials and tribulations to the eventual success of a high school basketball national title in 2003 Read more
Teriyaki Boyz|Serious Japanese
February 10, 2009 by King Jerm · 5 Comments

I decided to step out of the box and review something that I never would have listened to, the Teriyaki Boyz second album Serious Japanese. This is the follow up to their 2006 release Beef of Chicken. I am not going to front as if I know facts about the group Read more
Ludacris|Theater Of The Mind
November 25, 2008 by Guy Fawkes · 47 Comments

How do you label Ludacris? Is he a southern rapper? Is he a Hip-Hop mogul? Is he a rapper-turned actor? To me Luda is all of these, and none of these. When you think southern rap, you think of guys like Shawty LO, Soulja Boy, & Gucci Mane. I hope everyone can agree that Ludacris is on another level compared to those dudes. When I think of the word mogul, I imagine Russell Simmons, Jay-Z, & Suge Knight. These are people Read more
T-Pain|Thr33 Ringz
November 11, 2008 by H20 · 7 Comments

Yup, T-Pain is back. Wait, did he ever really leave? Just like Weezy, T-Pain has over-saturated the game constantly: he openly admits it and treats it like it’s his job. That said, T-Pain’s albums have always been…alright. I mean, the singles from the albums are almost always banging: “I’m N Luv (Wit a Stripper)” and “Buy You a Drank” have both been on my playlist for a long time now. Still, as a whole, they aren’t really Read more
David Banner|The Greatest Story Ever Told
July 17, 2008 by King Jerm · 13 Comments

Taking a break from his recent stint in Hollywood, David Banner releases his fourth major release The Greatest Story Ever Told. Taking three years since his last album, Banner took on worthy causes on while away from the mic. Standing up for Hip-Hop in front of cameras in a time when Hip-Hop was becoming public enemy #1, Banner wasn’t looking for publicity. Read more







