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Wyclef Jean

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From The Hut, To The Projects To The Mansion
From The Hut, To The Projects To The Mansion

$5.00
Wyclef killed this Gangsta Grillz album!!!! Everybody needs to step their game up for this one. He inspires warns and entertains you from beginning to end. From songs like warriors anthem to walk away and streets pronounce me dead. This is in my opinion one of the best albums of the year.
Greatest Hits
Greatest Hits

$7.99
truth be told His best stuff was on the Carnival Album&that is where His Main Hits came from Post Fugees era."Gone to November" was tight Original&the Re-Mix with R.Kelly is tight.but after His First Solo Set He went down."Ghetto Religion" is a cool cut He did with R.Kelly.still a bit pre-mature for a Greatest Hits on Him though.
Carnival II: Memoirs of an Immigrant
Carnival II: Memoirs of an Immigrant

$11.94
I'm a big fan of Wyclef and it seems like over the past few years, he's music as started to become a hit or miss for me. Clef's 2003 album, The Preacher's Son was son of his best work in my opinion. However, his 2004 follow-up, Welcome To Haiti Creole 101, which was his first independent release and a tribute album to his home country, was somewhat of a disappointment to me. In 2007, after returning back to Columbia Records, which he'd left in 2002, he released The Carnival II: Memoirs Of An Immigrant. Since I loved Clef's debut album, The Carnival, I was excited about this album, since I assumed that it would be very reminiscent of The Carnival. After purchasing the album, I realized it wasn't another Carnival, but it wasn't awful. His collaborations with Paul Simon on "Fast Car" and Mary J. Blige on "What About The Baby" are without a doubt the highlights of the album. "Heaven's In New York" is also a beautifully written track that I love. However, I feel as though this album is a combination of inspirational tracks and dancehall album fillers. I was expecting not to get so many dancehall club tracks, since the original Carnival album featured none. On a more positive note, my favorite part of this album is all the inspiration and knowledge brought into the number of songs that I do like.

The limited edition of the album features a bonus disc that includes five tracks. With this added on, the album becomes better, since the bonus disc seems as though it's about as good as the whole album is. "Million Voices" and "Emmanuelle" are both beautiful and inspirational songs that will bring you chills. The remix of "Sweetest Girl" features Raekwon and samples the instrumental of The Wu-Tang Clan's "C.R.E.A.M.". It's about the richest treat a true Hip-Hop fan can get.

The songs that I do like on the album are enough for me to keep it on the CD rack, but I just wish that on his next album he'd take it back to the basics, and gives us more Hip-Hop, and less dancehall and club tracks. I'm yearning for a resurrection of that Fugee Hip-Hop and really wish he'd bring it to us.
Sweetest Girl (Dollar Bill) (Album Version)
Sweetest Girl (Dollar Bill) (Album Version)

$0.99
Slammin track - if you like this track then check out Devin the Dude Smoke Sessions, Vol. 1- his first release since leaving Rapalot and his first album to hit The Billboard Charts

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