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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
actually one of my fav layzie bone cds to date,
This review is from: The New Revolution (Audio CD)
Why everybody is trashing this album [well actually just three reviewers] is beyond me. I happen to think Layzie is one of the best lyricsists in bone thugs and he drops some tight rhymes on the cd. The reason I prefer this over the other layzie bone cds is because the other ones don't have very many slow jams like this one does. Its a nice cd to just chill to, nothing more nothing less. The subject matter is still about getting high, shooting people, so don't expect anything else which I didn't when I heard this album. Usually I prefer rap cds such as cunninlynguists, sage francis, outkast[old stuff], music about things other than smoking weed and capping people but there's something about bone thugs that keeps me listening no matter how tired the subject matter is.
Anyways, as I said, take the album for what it is. Don't expect anything revoloutionary. Its just a fun cd to chill out to.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
the new revolution,
By THUG ON DA LINE (kenosha wi) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The New Revolution (Audio CD)
layzie bones the new revolution is an ok cd not layzies best but i have high standards for them since i started listing to them back in the creeping on ah come up days so its pretty hard to really impress me but iam happy with this purchase there a little to no recycled songs a few collabs with the high power soilders same ones from bizzys and layzies album thug unificaton
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
i love layzie bone,
A Kid's Review
This review is from: The New Revolution (Audio CD)
layzie bone is my favorite member from bone thugs besides krayzie bone and this album is an example of why. ive noticed that most people who are giving this cd bad ratings just simpily are not fans of layzie bone. if you are, i recomend this cd. if you're not really interested in him, this cd isnt going to change ur mind. but if ur a fan of his, this cd isnt going to change ur mind either. its nothing new. its still great.
3.0 out of 5 stars
Not a great layzie album, but not too bad either,
This review is from: The New Revolution (Audio CD)
First off. Layzie is a great rapper and has some great verses on many bone songs. But he just cannot make it solo. This is a decent album and has a few standout tracks, but is only recommended for the die hard bone thugs fans like myself who want to own every btnh song ever made. The standouts are:
"Vote for Me" (A great upbeat song, that is similar to 1st of tha month) "Mo Murder" (Great beat with Layzie's unique rapping inbetween) "For My Weed heads" (C'mon the title alone explains it, great song) "Streets (Ft. Bizzy) (Great beat with bizzy spittin as he always does) "Touchdown W/ Mo Thugs" (Very interesting song with a cool style, listen to this). The highlights are few and far between but this should be bought by the true bone fans
5.0 out of 5 stars
A good and solid album,
By
This review is from: The New Revolution (Audio CD)
After 2 disapointing albums (This is not a game, Cleveland) Layzie signed to the hardest label on the Westcoast (as it is said in the intro): Hi-Power Entertainment. This album has a lot trunk-bumping beats with tight rhymes and also slow-mo tracks for smokin and chillin. You could say the original Bone-Style got a little Westcoast-drift and got harder. When you like flat beats and weak rhymes you`re right: this ain`t your album.
3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Another forgettable solo from Layzie,
By
This review is from: The New Revolution (Audio CD)
On paper, a lot is wrong with Layzie Bone's August 22 release "The New Revolution". The album has a poorly planned release date, virtually no promotion, odd guest appearances, and an unlikely record label. As Bone Thugs-N-Harmony prepares for a full-blown comeback with a group album set for a September 19 release and another coming in the following year, Layzie appears to have sneaked in a solo album at the worst possible time. But after giving the album a few listens, this date almost makes sense. While always regarded as a talented and entertaining rapper, Layzie's solo releases have always been spotty and plagued with cluttering filler tracks. 2001's "Thug By Nature" provided everything the title would suggest and nothing more, and 2005's messy "It's Not A Game" was barely tolerable, mostly unreleased tracks spanning his whole career thrown together on a single disc. His collaboration album with Young Noble was definitely a step in the right direction, but this new release does not continue in that manner. If "The New Revolution" could be described in one word, it's awkward. His head-scratching decision to sign with Hi-Power Records doesn't seem to pay off, with guest appearances from numerous obscure chicano rappers that don't mesh well with Layzie's style. Much of these collaborations are spent with various Mr. Criminals and Mr. Capone-Es shouting "West coast! South Central!" type of cries and Layzie trying to draw a connection to Cleveland. Speaking of awkward, the only Bone member, or should I say former Bone member, to show up is Bizzy, for the forced collaboration "Streets". What's left of the formerly strong Mo Thugs collective also shows up for the uninspired "Touchdown".
Layzie's inconsistent lyricism on his solo albums has always been part of what lent to his troubles in the field before, and "The New Revolution" is no exception. Many tracks contain the classic Bone cries of "Mo murda", "Thuggin' for Cleveland", "Smoke some weed", which even by now are starting to grow tiresome, which would not be the case if the whole album weren't full of them. The Bone cliches plague the album, but Lay mostly fails to bring any originality to them; a Bone fan will feel like they've heard most of these verses before. Production ranges from decent to sounds-like-it-was-made-on-my-cousin's-laptop, but none would be referred to as great, often just minimal beats and instrumentals. For the most part, Lay just fails to deliver the thug tails, the slower melodic tracks, or the triple-time verses that usually work so well for him. The first full song is "Vote For Me", which is certainly a highlight for the album but doesn't even fill its potential. It has nice slow production, and Layzie drops a couple relevant and conscious verses, exploring the world's problems and calling for unity as Bone did on tracks like "Change the World" and "Home" in the past. However, at the end when Lay declares, "I should be your president...vote for me!" it left me scratching my head. It made his message for the whole song unclear and just makes it sound confused. "Mo Murder" bears the same name as the classic Bone song off the "E. 1999 Eternal" album, but no one would ever confuse the two. It's a forced collaboration with Big Sloan, with generic production and uninspired verses and chorus containing the same cliches that we've heard from Bone spinoffs for ten years. The words and production of "For My Weed Heads" and "I Get Higher" are barely distinguishable, both fine tracks but the two together are redundant. They both are about Layzie's sheer love of the ganja, why we should all have a puff, et cetera. They both have a Latin guitar backing and a sung chorus, and they're both weed songs for the Bone Thugs vaults. "Midwest-Westcoast Connection" is the most awkward collaboration, this with Hi-Power rapper Mr. Criminal. The production is decent upbeat woozy g-funk, but the collabo is as awkward as the title would suggest. This is followed by "From the 99", which might sound like just another Cleveland reppin' thug tune, which basically it is. However, we haven't had any of these songs for a few years from any Bone member, so it's an enjoyable track. Lay remembers the other thugs lost on "For the Thugs That's Gone", which works pretty well. "Wanted to Be a Soldier" really cramps Layzie's style for his Hi-Power collaborators, as does a later track, "These Hi-Power Soldiers", neither of which sound have ended up on a Layzie Bone album. Both are awkward, forced, and irrelevant to anything. "Say Lady" with Mr. Criminal turns out to be one of the best tracks on the disc, well produced and entertaining. "Streets", with the Bizzy Bone appearance, does pretty well for what it's intended for but again sounds uncomfortable. The odd outro starts with a Bizzy Bone verse and then just kind of fades into a weird advertisement. "The New Revolution" doesn't really contain any bad tracks, but has no great ones either. At the end, I find that it's a pretty uninspired release, even if it isn't terrible. Layzie is a truly talented artist and can definitely do better than this; I feel like I have heard a lot of this album before. This isn't one I will be listening to much repeatedly. Bone fans such as myself may enjoy this because of the lack of recent music from the camp, but with so much scheduled for the near future, this one should be quickly forgotten, and that might just be okay.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Bone is the best group!,
This review is from: The New Revolution (Audio CD)
But Layzie goes from wack to tight song to song and his solos are not that great but, this is his best solo with about 5 good songs on this album, Bone's solo with interscope records comes out in December and will be a super hit, [...]
0 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
The Most horrible Bone CD I've Ever heard!!,
This review is from: The New Revolution (Audio CD)
After i heard the new Bone CD i had much faith in this new release from Layzie, although his previous efforts were all , very admittedly, bombs. And unfortunately this new release was no change for Layzie Bone. It seems as if a Layzie with out the Thugs is not a good deal.. With no "hardcore" or "Club Worthy" songs , his CD lacks anything truly listenable...honestly, his lyrics don't even represent his talent on his solo releases...Will Somebody please tell Layzie to not release solo albums!! He is tarnishing his reputation as a rap artist!!
2 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
what is happening to bone?,
By
This review is from: The New Revolution (Audio CD)
bone should go back to their old style, when dj u-neek was producing them. now they are all wack, except from the newest krazy bones album gemini... dont buy this, dont even bother if ur a bone fan
2 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
LAYZIE BONE IS DONE!,
By PROUD BROTHA "westside" (HAMPTON ,VA, BY WAY OF LOS ANGELES) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The New Revolution (Audio CD)
LAYZIE BONE IS THE WORSE MEMBER OF BONE THUGS, HIS ALBUMS ARE BORING, HIS LYRICS ARE WACK, AND SIGNING A DEAL WITH THOSE WACK ESES LIKE MR.CAPONE E IS THE WORSE THINGS TO DO.MR.CAPONE SUCKS HIS LABEL SUCKS, AND ALL THOSE PUNK ESES ON THE WESTCOAST SUCK. WHEN I GET BACK OUT WEST. I WILL SEE YA
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The New Revolution by Layzie Bone (Audio CD - 2006)
$17.98 $6.72
In Stock | ||