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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars pretty good part 2 album
18 years since he came in the rap game, 6 years since his last My Homies album, 3 years since his last solo, 2 weeks since the last album he was part of, The Legend and real King of the South (not these sweet candy A$$e$ claimin the title) Uncle Face is back. Of the dozen or so albums I have with Face as part of them, this is defintiely on the lower half (slightly worse...
Published on March 7, 2006 by G$

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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Scarface should have left some of his "Homies" at home this time around
As a fan of rap music in general, when I think of Down South rap music, 3 things come to my mind right away: Scarface & The Geto Boys, Outkast & UGK. When any of these groups are getting ready to come out with a CD, I highly anticipate music from any of these people. The original "My Homies" was a classic. As a Scarface fan you wanted to hear him on every song but...
Published on March 15, 2006 by J. Highsmith


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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Scarface should have left some of his "Homies" at home this time around, March 15, 2006
By 
J. Highsmith (Mitchellville, Maryland United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: My Homies 2 (Audio CD)
As a fan of rap music in general, when I think of Down South rap music, 3 things come to my mind right away: Scarface & The Geto Boys, Outkast & UGK. When any of these groups are getting ready to come out with a CD, I highly anticipate music from any of these people. The original "My Homies" was a classic. As a Scarface fan you wanted to hear him on every song but even the songs that Scarface weren't featured on were songs that you could listen to. This time around, however, that wasn't the case.

A few weeks earlier Scarface dropped a CD along with The Product, which are composed of Willie Hen and Young Malice entitled "One Hunnid". "One Hunnid" has alot of songs worth checking out including "G Type", which was produced by The Alchemist, the current single, "I'm A", "Get Out" and even a song with Scarface only on the chorus entitled "Dead Broke".

I figured with "My Homies 2" coming out, that this CD would be just as good or even better than "One Hunnid". Unfortunately, that isn't the case. However, Scarface isn't to blame for this, it is his "Homies" who are expected to carry the weight, who end up ruining the party.

"My Homies 2" gets off to an excellent start with the "Intro". This is the Scarface that everyone has come to know and love. Street rhymes of tales from the South and a dark, eerie beat in the background. The next track, "Definition Of Real" has Scarface matched up with Z-Ro and a Don Mega less Ice Cube to make a tight track over a nice N.O. Joe track. Anyone who is a fan of Scarface knows N.O. Joe for his many production credits on Scarface's solo CDs from the past. My favorite track on this CD has to be the remix to "Never Snitch". I heard the original track with 3 Scarface verses on a mixed CD. This version includes Scarface on the 1st verse, Beanie Sigel on the 2nd verse and Game on the last verse. Now I will admit that this is an unlikely combination but the 3 MCs ride the Tone Capone and Scarface track until the wheels fall off. When Scarface makes a CD entitled "My Homies", this is what I expect. The "Homies" that are included on the CD should make quality contributions. This occurs again on "Street Lights". Scarface features Yung Redd & Lil Ron on this track. Although, I am not familiar with these artists they actually make a quality contribution to the song. Tone Capone, Scarface and Mike Dean contribute together to produce the smooth and laid back, "Gotta Get Paid". This track is one of the few tracks without his "Homies" which is why this track is one of my favorites. "Pass The Itchy" has a reggae feel to it and is the other solo track that Scarface has on this CD, while the lyrics are on point, Scarface fans will enjoy "Gotta Get Paid" better.
"My Homies 2" closes out with the Tone Capone & Mike Dean produced "My Life" which features Scarface, Willie D and Bushwick Bill". This track is off the hook. Anyone who is a fan of the Geto Boys earlier CDs with tracks like "Gangster Of Love" and "Mind Of A Lunatic" will like this track. The only bad thing about "My Life" is that the track is better than any other song on The Geto Boys' last CD, "The Foundation" other than the single "Yes Yes Y'all" and Scarface's "G Code".

The problem with "My Homies 2" is that the tracks that only feature "The Homies" and not Scarface are ridiculous in most cases. The best track without Scarface ends up being "Southern N_____" which features Mr. Lee, who did production on Slim Thug's "Already Platinum" CD and Bun B's "Trill" CD, Rell, 8-Ball, E-Rock, Lil Keke & Slim Thug. This is the only song that is on "My Homies 2" that I can honestly say that I can listen to that doesn't have Scarface on it. I can appreciate Z-Ro's remake of Scarface's "I Seen A Man Die" entitled "Man Cry" but some things are better left alone. I would rather hear Z-Ro do something original than to remake a Scarface track on his own "My Homies 2" CD. Bun B and Chamillionaire do their best to try and save "Platinum Starz" but Lil Flip's weak verse and Bigg Tyme's cheesy sample take away anything good from the song. That surprises me because Bigg Tyme had a nice beat on the "Intro". You can atleast attempt to listen to "We Out Here" which features The Ghetto Slaves and Skip of UTP. However, you were already tired of the sample that Mike Jones used on his track "Cuttin'", so you definitely won't want to hear it again on "We Out Here". Spade R.I.P.P.E.R.'s "Always" is just plain ridiculous. This song definitely qualifies as the worst song that I have heard in the year 2006 so far. "Club Bangaz" has a decent beat produced by KLC, who was in Master P's "Beats By The Pound" back in 1998, but the song can't even be saved by a nice Juvenile verse. Partners N Crime add nothing to the song at all.

Overall, the songs that feature Scarface will be the reason why you buy "My Homies 2". Scarface makes it perfectly clear that he has not lost any of his skills and in my opinion, he is and will always be The King Of The South, whether he wants the title or not. The problem with "My Homies 2" is when his homies give lackluster performances which take away from the overall quality of this CD. If you have all of the other Scarface CDs like I do, "My Homies 2" is still worth having in your collection. You'll just wish Scarface would have left some of his "Homies" at home this time around. You should also pick up Scarface's CD with The Product entitled "One Hunnid".

Track listing:

1) Intro
2) Definition Of Real- Scarface, Z-Ro & Ice Cube
3) Never Snitch (Remix)- Scarface, Beanie Sigel & Game
4) Man Cry- Z-Ro
5) Street Lights- Scarface, Yung Redd & Lil Ron
6) We Out Here- Skip Of UTP & The Ghetto Slaves
7) Gotta Get Paid- Scarface
8) Club Bangaz- Partners N Crime & Juvenile
9) Platinum Starz- Lil Flip, Chamillionaire & Bun B
10) Always- Spade R.I.P.P.E.R.
11) Tryin' To ____ Something- Vicious & Scarface (on the chorus)
12) Pass The Itchy- Scarface
13) Southern N_____- Mr. Lee, Rell, 8-Ball, E-Rock, Lil Keke & Slim Thug
14) My Life- Scarface & The Geto Boys

James' Top 5

1) Never Snitch (Remix)- Scarface, Beanie Sigel & Game
2) My Life- Scarface & The Geto Boys
3) Gotta Get Paid- Scarface
4) Street Lights- Scarface, Yung Redd & Lil Ron
5) Definition Of Real- Scarface, Z-Ro & Ice Cube
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Strong Cd i wish there was more scarface on it 3.5, April 4, 2006
This review is from: My Homies 2 (Audio CD)
I am a huge scarface fan i have been for a long time. he is one of the originaters of southern rap along with outkast and ugk. if i had to pick a real king of the south it would be scarface. the album is great for the most part. the strong deep almost out of breeth voice of face is something i always enjoy on his cds. he has a great cast of features on this cd. basicaly all the down south names and some surprises. the best traqck is the single put out on the cd that is def a street anthem called never snitch. game and beans feature on this song and its a def ten. even though the songs without scarface were hott they were missing the godfather of southern rap. there are good ones like the remix z-roe has "man cry" and "platinum stars" wit bun chamili and flip. this song is a tight summer song with 2 greats on it over a many beat. although it is old and has been on like evey sothern mixtape for the past yr. i was hopin it would be a remix or face would spit but he didnt. its still a tigh song chamillinaire and buns verses are ofcourse thight and flip adds his touch to it which is kind of tight. definition of real with z-roe, face and cube is real hard of course with the three of them on a track its imposible to not be grimy. southern niggas is tight with an all star southern cast of new comers and some ogs. but again the same problem face isnt on the track. the cd is great but its in a way a little bit of a let down for real face fans who want a ful length face record. if it was a mixtape i would give it a 5 but i give it a 3.5 just bc he is not on all the tracks it is still very worth buying and i no im being harsh but i wanted a full scarface cd its still a great souther cd.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars pretty good part 2 album, March 7, 2006
By 
This review is from: My Homies 2 (Audio CD)
18 years since he came in the rap game, 6 years since his last My Homies album, 3 years since his last solo, 2 weeks since the last album he was part of, The Legend and real King of the South (not these sweet candy A$$e$ claimin the title) Uncle Face is back. Of the dozen or so albums I have with Face as part of them, this is defintiely on the lower half (slightly worse then his first My Homies album). Much like that one, Face is on slightly over half the songs (8 of the 14, with 3 being solo's). It has 2 almost classics, 2 I skip, 4-6 are good, 4-6 are ok. Guests are on a lot of the songs and ar emostly southern rappers.(all but 3). Production is decent and handled by the usual. Bigg Tyme does 3 songs, Tone Capone, Mike Dean and Scarface each do 2, Mr. Lee, KLC, N.O. Joe and 2 others I never heard of all do 1 song. It slacks off alot after the first half of the album but it's still solid. A nice album for his fans to have.

#1 - 8 (Scarface -- short intro)
#2 - 8.5 (Z-Ro f/ Scarface, Ice Cube)
#3 - 9.5 (Scarface f/ Beanie Sigel & The Game -- about never snitchin --- nice beat)
#4 - 9.5 (Z-Ro -- redo of Face's classic "I Seen A Man Die" -- tight beat)
#5 - 8.5 (Young Redd f/ Scarface, Lil Ron)
#6 - 5 (Ghetto Slaves f/ Skip of UTP)
#7 - 9 (Scarface -- about hustling)
#8 - 7 (Partners-N-Crime f/ Juvenile)
#9 - 7.5 (Lil Flip, Chamillionaire, Bun B)
#10 - 4 (Spaide Ripper)
#11 - 7 (Vicious f/ Scarface)
#12 - 7.5 (Scarface)
#13 - 7 (Mr. Lee, Rell, Eightball, E-Rock, Lil Keke, Slim Thug)
#14 - 8 (Scarface f/ Willie D, Bushwick Bill)

Brad Jordan -- b. 11/9/70 -- b. San Antonio, TX moved to Houston, TX

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Real, May 22, 2006
This review is from: My Homies 2 (Audio CD)
Scarface is heads and shoulders above all the other rap artist. They need instruction from him on how it should be done. 3-six, Ludacris, etc. sound like noise and dirt after sampling the clean crisp sound of scarface. But wait--Wisdom? Indeed! Something from this guy should be in everyone's collection!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars siccrich, May 2, 2006
This review is from: My Homies 2 (Audio CD)
Alot of these southern reviews kill me. Nowadays everybody claiming to be the king of the south. Did face fall off? Don't think so. Before you be shouting I'm king of the south, better recognize top the dude that paved the way for this new generation of H-Town rappers. No one , I mean no one will ever lay it down as face did thru his entire career. I been listen to face/ Ghetto Boys Since I young and nobody can top face. Yall need to sit back and take notes from Scarface the realest to ever touch the mic.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Scarface - My Homies, Vol. 2, March 10, 2006
This review is from: My Homies 2 (Audio CD)
Scarface is one of those rare ill MC's that has been killing the game for years, his latest release is "My Homies, Vol.2" (2006). This is not a Face solo album release, more a series of collaborations. Face starts the album off strong showing hes still hungry on the intro, then teams up with Z-Ro and Ice Cube for the banging "Definition Of Real", all three come on point on this cut. Beanie Sigel and Game drop in for the rugged "Never Snitch". Z-Ro shines when remaking faces "Man Cry", putting his own life spin on it. My favourite track on this one is the smooth "Street Lights", Scarface collabs with Yung Redd & Lil Ron and delivers a memorable cut. "We Out Here" is bunk, not impressed by Ghetto Slaves & Skip of UTP. Scarface tells street life stories on "Gotta Get Paid". After this Face puts a lot of different MC's on giving them a chance to shine on the next six tracks, not feeling any of it, all average to weak cuts in my opinion. I am not impressed by the later part of the album, Face does not disappoint but others do. Thankfully Scarface reunites with his Geto Boys comrades Willie D and Bushwick Bill for the tight closer "My Life". "My Homies, Vol. 2." is a release worth checking out. 3.5.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Scarface and Company, June 21, 2006
This review is from: My Homies 2 (Audio CD)
"It was the day that hell broke loose!...". That's how this albumn starts with Face barking over a dark, menacing beat. If more cuts on this CD would have been similar to the intro, this albumn might have gotten 4 stars. Instead, as with the first "My Homies" compilation, Face steps aside for the most part to give his labelmates some shine. Guests, I mean homies include Z-Ro, who pays homage to Face with "Man Cry", his own rendition of the classic "I Seen a Man Die". That track works for me, mainly due to the nostalgia sparked up by the beat. Another homie is Beanie Siegel who appears on the bangin' "Never Snitch" and growls, "...f@ck your mother, the b#tch ain't sh%t for having you..."! Ice Cube comes through and blesses the CD with a verse on the standout track "Definition of Real". Other homies include Game, Juvenile, Lil KeKe, Bun B, Chamillionare, and The Geto Boys (Willie D and Bushwick Bill). In my humble opinion, half of "My Homies, Part Two" is filler material. Tracks like "Southern N#gga" and "Club Bangaz", which features Juvenile, really miss the mark. The highlights are those tracks that team up well established rappers. "Platinum Starz" (Lil Flip, Chamillionare, and Bun B) will no doubt be heard up and down blocks all over the south all summer. The best tracks feature Mr. Brad Jordan (Scarface) himself. He has a couple of solo cuts, and the best song on the albumn is "Gotta Get Paid". The hook is mean, better yet viscious, and the track is one of the best I've ever heard Face rhyme over. Finally, another standout features a Geto Boys reunion entitled "My Life". This track serves up a sizzlin', electric loop, with a hook by someone who sounds a lot like Curtis Mayfield. Bushwick offers, "I only have one eye, but I see things ever so clear...if there's a heaven for a G, then I'm prepared to go there..."

"Part Two" is okay. It's definately not a classic, but it will wet the appetites of Houston's hard core fan base and Scarface's, who are all waiting patiently for "Made".
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars texas take over, March 29, 2006
This review is from: My Homies 2 (Audio CD)
San Diego CA,review on real rap: Scarface's my homies part 2 has everyone whose anyone on it in my opinion. texas is taking over the rap game and this is the truth, from Scarface to Chamillionaire,Bun B, Lil' Flip,and plenty others and my personal favorite Z-ro the third coast his holdin it down for the rap community.Plenty San Diegans rep texas rap cause we recognize real music.Keep it gully Tex.Alwayz
--TREW
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Tryin to help out his boys, March 14, 2006
This review is from: My Homies 2 (Audio CD)
There was alot of bull on the album from random cats that got lost and some how ended up in the studio. For example "we out here" featuring skip... sounds like FACE lost a bet and was forced to put skip on the track. The only reason I didn't rate it lower than a 4 is because the album is from one of the greats out the SOUTH. Maybe the next album will be better. Until then... peace.
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3.0 out of 5 stars DRS said "This Is For...MY HOMIES!" That's About All This CD Is For!, May 7, 2006
This review is from: My Homies 2 (Audio CD)
Here we go again with another old school legend with nothing to prove. But if you live, eat, and sleep music, then what else is there to do? Enter Scarface with a single and double-disc sequel to his previous installment of My Homies. The whole point of these albums is the collaborations with other legends and new faces, which Scarface seems to keep to a minimal on his other releases. I like it when he puts out these albums because he's forced to step his own game up since it's other people rocking the same track. He also gives the reigns to some of his partners to rock their own songs without the help of Scarface. My Homies, Part 2 delivers on stellar performances from Scarface. It's just too bad his homies didn't follow suit on a majority of the tracks.

Ice Cube blasts off his verse on "Definition of Real" with Face and Z-Ro, leaving the two of them sitting on the sidelines. Beanie Sigel keeps up with Mista Mista Scarface on "Never Snitch," while The Game only gives an okay performance. Z-Ro lives up to his name on "Man Cry," a remix of sorts to Scarface's original smash hit. "Street Lights" gives a glimmer of hope to the album's outlook with help from Yung Redd and Lil Ron. But then that hope goes down the drain with "We Out Here" featuring an unspeakable performance from Skip and the Ghetto Slaves as well as a horrifying YODELING sample!

Scarface decides to go solo on "Gotta Get Paid," a track that could have had better production. "Club Bangaz" featuring Juvenile and Partners N Crime is just what the title suggests, although Scarface doesn't appear on the song for good reason since he isn't known to do any songs like this. Bun B should have ran for the hills when he heard the 'Gimme A Break' sample on "Platinum Stars," especially with the South's wackest offering of Lil Flip and Chamillionaire putting their lackluster lyrics on the song. "Always" features Spider R.I.P.P.E.R. doing a typical Down South track for the thugs to rock to. Vicious gives an okay track with "Tryin To F*ck Something" while Scarface tries his hand at rocking a reggae beat on "Pass The Itchy."

The last two cuts on the album include the Dirty South posse cut "Southern N!gg@" with everybody and they momma spitting a verse (actually just Mr. Lee, 8-Ball, E-Rock, Lil Keke, Slim Thug and the singing of Rell), and Scarface reuniting with his group The Geto Boys for "My Life." All in all, not a bad collection even though it could have been much better. I give Scarface an 'A' for effort, but a 'C' for execution. It's worth you money if you can stomach the bad cuts. Better yet, get your index finger ready to push the skip button on the sprinkling of crap on My Homies, Part 2.
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My Homies 2
My Homies 2 by Scarface (Audio CD - 2006)
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