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Music News: Uh-Oh kid cudi...NEW BOYZ "Skinny Jeans & A Mic" is out too
Member Since: 12/12/2004
Posts: 17,160
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Quote:
Originally posted by ëlëctrik-city
LMAO.  I generally don't think people who aren't skinny should wear skinny jeans...and that is probably why Omarion always look questionable in them.
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i've seen FAT people try to wear them 
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Member Since: 8/24/2008
Posts: 35,091
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Quote:
Originally posted by Delicious
i've seen FAT people try to wear them 
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So have I. 
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Member Since: 10/18/2008
Posts: 1,640
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Quote:
Originally posted by Delicious
i've seen FAT people try to wear them 
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Member Since: 9/5/2009
Posts: 1,708
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Got done listening to the album on the ride to school and here's my review
01. Cricketz (Feat. Tyga) - 9/10
02. You're A Jerk - 10/10
03. Dot Com- 9/10
04. Colorz - 7/10
05. Way 2 Many Chickz - 5/10
06. Turnt - 5/10
07. Bunz (Feat. Kydd-SB) - 6/10
08. Cashmere - 9/10 (  )
09. So Dope - 8/10
10. Tie Me Down (Feat. Ray J) - 10/10
11. New Girl (Feat. D&D) - 8/10
12. No More (Feat. O.N.E.) - 10/10 (A monster urban hit waiting to happen)
13. One Night - 7/10
It started and ended strong with some filler in between but overall, a surprisingly great album. They've got a lot of potential, especially since they're actually decent rappers unlike their counterparts (Soulja Boy and the other one-hit dance-craze wonders)...if promoted and marketed properly, they could be huge especially with the single potential they've got on this album.
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Member Since: 12/12/2004
Posts: 17,160
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Quote:
Originally posted by ëlëctrik-city
Got done listening to the album on the ride to school and here's my review
01. Cricketz (Feat. Tyga) - 9/10
02. You're A Jerk - 10/10
03. Dot Com- 9/10
04. Colorz - 7/10
05. Way 2 Many Chickz - 5/10
06. Turnt - 5/10
07. Bunz (Feat. Kydd-SB) - 6/10
08. Cashmere - 9/10 (  )
09. So Dope - 8/10
10. Tie Me Down (Feat. Ray J) - 10/10
11. New Girl (Feat. D&D) - 8/10
12. No More (Feat. O.N.E.) - 10/10 (A monster urban hit waiting to happen)
13. One Night - 7/10
It started and ended strong with some filler in between but overall, a surprisingly great album. They've got a lot of potential, especially since they're actually decent rappers unlike their counterparts (Soulja Boy and the other one-hit dance-craze wonders)...if promoted and marketed properly, they could be huge especially with the single potential they've got on this album.
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No More  that & dot com should be the next singles imo
cashmere is TEWW silly ... "ayyo dont get me wrong , we love lesbians ...just not you"   
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Member Since: 6/3/2008
Posts: 2,217
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ugh i got a pair of purple skinny jeans. I love skinny's so freaking much. They aren't really bad at all. They just tight on your legs and thats it. lol but i love them. Next ima get the lime greens, the blues, and the reds! I wont **** with them zebra prints. UGH EW!
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Member Since: 7/28/2008
Posts: 4,613
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Quote:
Originally posted by ëlëctrik-city
Got done listening to the album on the ride to school and here's my review
01. Cricketz (Feat. Tyga) - 9/10
02. You're A Jerk - 10/10
03. Dot Com- 9/10
04. Colorz - 7/10
05. Way 2 Many Chickz - 5/10
06. Turnt - 5/10
07. Bunz (Feat. Kydd-SB) - 6/10
08. Cashmere - 9/10 (  )
09. So Dope - 8/10
10. Tie Me Down (Feat. Ray J) - 10/10
11. New Girl (Feat. D&D) - 8/10
12. No More (Feat. O.N.E.) - 10/10 (A monster urban hit waiting to happen)
13. One Night - 7/10
It started and ended strong with some filler in between but overall, a surprisingly great album. They've got a lot of potential, especially since they're actually decent rappers unlike their counterparts (Soulja Boy and the other one-hit dance-craze wonders)...if promoted and marketed properly, they could be huge especially with the single potential they've got on this album.
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It would be easy to just blast the New Boyz, point to them as signs of everything that’s wrong with hip-hop, make a couple skinny jeans jokes and move on. Sorry, I don’t do easy. For all the hardcore hip-hop heads that saw the New Boyz surrounded by dancing teenagers on BET and launched into a frenzy of hatred, let me say this: relax. First of all, if you’re that serious about your hip-hop, what are you doing listening to the New Boyz? Go memorize the new Raekwon. Second, I hate to break this to you, but you can’t expect everyone to only make the music you like. Like a healthy democracy, hip-hop’s better when it has as many different voices as possible. Yeah that’s right. I just tied the advent of democracy to a group whose known for “jerkin.”
Point is, let’s not be so quick to write off the New Boyz and their debut album Skinny Jeanz and a Mic. Unlike past one hit wonders - anyone remember who did Party Like a Rockstar? – the New Boyz are part of a larger youth-fueled movement that ironically draws on hip-hop’s early days to produce stripped down, percussively heavy beats and slowly paced rhymes. I’m not saying that the California bred duo of Ben J and Legacy are the future of hip-hop, I’m just saying that bashing Skinny Jeanz and a Mic because it isn’t Illmatic is like bashing McDonald’s for not making delicious steaks. The New Boyz are what they are: a popular teenage rap group that will either have to evolve or inevitably fade away.
If we’re talking about the New Boyz we’re really talking about You’re a Jerk. Not only was the catchy single the track that introduced the duo to the world, it’s a blueprint for their entire sound: sparse production, booming bass, sped up vocal sample for the hook and lyrics about girls and clothes. (Careful listeners will catch a surprising reference to Jim Crow laws in You’re a Jerk. Looks like someone paid attention in U.S. history class). In other words, You’re a Jerk comes complete with a dance, style and catch phrase, exactly the type of track teenagers fall in love with, then promptly forget about a year later. It’s what teenagers do – and what you did when you were a teenager too. In fact, despite its one hit wonder label, You’re a Jerk isn’t entirely an anomaly; their music is in the same ballpark as other back to basics rap from crews like The Cool Kids. The opening track Cricketz is an pre-emptive strike on naysayers with a gold rope chain worth beat that shows that Ben and Legacy are respectably skilled rappers for youngsters, and Bunz is a 2 Live Crew-esque ode to booty that is classic guilty pleasure material. Come on, admit it haters, Skinny Jeanz has its moments.
As accepting as I try to be, there are portions of Skinny Jeanz and a Mic that are completely indefensible, starting with Tie Me Down (aka “the song that god put on this earth to punish me”). First of all, there’s something creepy about Ray J appearing on a New Boyz track, like after the sex tape and the affront to humanity that is For the Love of Ray J show he shouldn’t be allowed near children, or tracks whose primary audience is minors. Regardless of Ray J, I simply can’t forgive the auto-tuned verses from the New Boyz. What’s more, while the rest of the album’s minimalistic approach to hip-hip can get monotonous, the last third of Skinny Jeanz turns into a pop-R&B fest, starting with Tie Me Down and ending with the terrible quasi-ballad One Night. Someone undoubtedly told the boys they needed to do more to attract teenage girls, but in the course of doing so they throw out everything that made them unique and become, yes, just another forgettable teen sensation.
So where does that leave us? If I had to bet, I’d say that Skinny Jeanz and a Mic will be the last time we hear from the New Boyz, but the duo show just enough skill on the album to provide a glimmer of hope. If Ben J and Legacy can put aside the lame R&B attempts and focus on making their unique brand of hip-hop, they could have some life in the game. And if they can’t, well, there’s gonna be a lot of people donating their skinny jeans to the Salvation Army in a couple years.
this album is the pits HONESTLY!
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Member Since: 8/3/2006
Posts: 33,524
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Quote:
Originally posted by hEz_iRvy_iRv
It would be easy to just blast the New Boyz, point to them as signs of everything that’s wrong with hip-hop, make a couple skinny jeans jokes and move on. Sorry, I don’t do easy. For all the hardcore hip-hop heads that saw the New Boyz surrounded by dancing teenagers on BET and launched into a frenzy of hatred, let me say this: relax. First of all, if you’re that serious about your hip-hop, what are you doing listening to the New Boyz? Go memorize the new Raekwon. Second, I hate to break this to you, but you can’t expect everyone to only make the music you like. Like a healthy democracy, hip-hop’s better when it has as many different voices as possible. Yeah that’s right. I just tied the advent of democracy to a group whose known for “jerkin.”
Point is, let’s not be so quick to write off the New Boyz and their debut album Skinny Jeanz and a Mic. Unlike past one hit wonders - anyone remember who did Party Like a Rockstar? – the New Boyz are part of a larger youth-fueled movement that ironically draws on hip-hop’s early days to produce stripped down, percussively heavy beats and slowly paced rhymes. I’m not saying that the California bred duo of Ben J and Legacy are the future of hip-hop, I’m just saying that bashing Skinny Jeanz and a Mic because it isn’t Illmatic is like bashing McDonald’s for not making delicious steaks. The New Boyz are what they are: a popular teenage rap group that will either have to evolve or inevitably fade away.
If we’re talking about the New Boyz we’re really talking about You’re a Jerk. Not only was the catchy single the track that introduced the duo to the world, it’s a blueprint for their entire sound: sparse production, booming bass, sped up vocal sample for the hook and lyrics about girls and clothes. (Careful listeners will catch a surprising reference to Jim Crow laws in You’re a Jerk. Looks like someone paid attention in U.S. history class). In other words, You’re a Jerk comes complete with a dance, style and catch phrase, exactly the type of track teenagers fall in love with, then promptly forget about a year later. It’s what teenagers do – and what you did when you were a teenager too. In fact, despite its one hit wonder label, You’re a Jerk isn’t entirely an anomaly; their music is in the same ballpark as other back to basics rap from crews like The Cool Kids. The opening track Cricketz is an pre-emptive strike on naysayers with a gold rope chain worth beat that shows that Ben and Legacy are respectably skilled rappers for youngsters, and Bunz is a 2 Live Crew-esque ode to booty that is classic guilty pleasure material. Come on, admit it haters, Skinny Jeanz has its moments.
As accepting as I try to be, there are portions of Skinny Jeanz and a Mic that are completely indefensible, starting with Tie Me Down (aka “the song that god put on this earth to punish me”). First of all, there’s something creepy about Ray J appearing on a New Boyz track, like after the sex tape and the affront to humanity that is For the Love of Ray J show he shouldn’t be allowed near children, or tracks whose primary audience is minors. Regardless of Ray J, I simply can’t forgive the auto-tuned verses from the New Boyz. What’s more, while the rest of the album’s minimalistic approach to hip-hip can get monotonous, the last third of Skinny Jeanz turns into a pop-R&B fest, starting with Tie Me Down and ending with the terrible quasi-ballad One Night. Someone undoubtedly told the boys they needed to do more to attract teenage girls, but in the course of doing so they throw out everything that made them unique and become, yes, just another forgettable teen sensation.
So where does that leave us? If I had to bet, I’d say that Skinny Jeanz and a Mic will be the last time we hear from the New Boyz, but the duo show just enough skill on the album to provide a glimmer of hope. If Ben J and Legacy can put aside the lame R&B attempts and focus on making their unique brand of hip-hop, they could have some life in the game. And if they can’t, well, there’s gonna be a lot of people donating their skinny jeans to the Salvation Army in a couple years.
this album is the pits HONESTLY!
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Irv, i hope you didn't write all that crap.................. 
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Member Since: 1/9/2009
Posts: 3,553
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Quote:
Originally posted by hEz_iRvy_iRv
It would be easy to just blast the New Boyz, point to them as signs of everything that’s wrong with hip-hop, make a couple skinny jeans jokes and move on. Sorry, I don’t do easy. For all the hardcore hip-hop heads that saw the New Boyz surrounded by dancing teenagers on BET and launched into a frenzy of hatred, let me say this: relax. First of all, if you’re that serious about your hip-hop, what are you doing listening to the New Boyz? Go memorize the new Raekwon. Second, I hate to break this to you, but you can’t expect everyone to only make the music you like. Like a healthy democracy, hip-hop’s better when it has as many different voices as possible. Yeah that’s right. I just tied the advent of democracy to a group whose known for “jerkin.”
Point is, let’s not be so quick to write off the New Boyz and their debut album Skinny Jeanz and a Mic. Unlike past one hit wonders - anyone remember who did Party Like a Rockstar? – the New Boyz are part of a larger youth-fueled movement that ironically draws on hip-hop’s early days to produce stripped down, percussively heavy beats and slowly paced rhymes. I’m not saying that the California bred duo of Ben J and Legacy are the future of hip-hop, I’m just saying that bashing Skinny Jeanz and a Mic because it isn’t Illmatic is like bashing McDonald’s for not making delicious steaks. The New Boyz are what they are: a popular teenage rap group that will either have to evolve or inevitably fade away.
If we’re talking about the New Boyz we’re really talking about You’re a Jerk. Not only was the catchy single the track that introduced the duo to the world, it’s a blueprint for their entire sound: sparse production, booming bass, sped up vocal sample for the hook and lyrics about girls and clothes. (Careful listeners will catch a surprising reference to Jim Crow laws in You’re a Jerk. Looks like someone paid attention in U.S. history class). In other words, You’re a Jerk comes complete with a dance, style and catch phrase, exactly the type of track teenagers fall in love with, then promptly forget about a year later. It’s what teenagers do – and what you did when you were a teenager too. In fact, despite its one hit wonder label, You’re a Jerk isn’t entirely an anomaly; their music is in the same ballpark as other back to basics rap from crews like The Cool Kids. The opening track Cricketz is an pre-emptive strike on naysayers with a gold rope chain worth beat that shows that Ben and Legacy are respectably skilled rappers for youngsters, and Bunz is a 2 Live Crew-esque ode to booty that is classic guilty pleasure material. Come on, admit it haters, Skinny Jeanz has its moments.
As accepting as I try to be, there are portions of Skinny Jeanz and a Mic that are completely indefensible, starting with Tie Me Down (aka “the song that god put on this earth to punish me”). First of all, there’s something creepy about Ray J appearing on a New Boyz track, like after the sex tape and the affront to humanity that is For the Love of Ray J show he shouldn’t be allowed near children, or tracks whose primary audience is minors. Regardless of Ray J, I simply can’t forgive the auto-tuned verses from the New Boyz. What’s more, while the rest of the album’s minimalistic approach to hip-hip can get monotonous, the last third of Skinny Jeanz turns into a pop-R&B fest, starting with Tie Me Down and ending with the terrible quasi-ballad One Night. Someone undoubtedly told the boys they needed to do more to attract teenage girls, but in the course of doing so they throw out everything that made them unique and become, yes, just another forgettable teen sensation.
So where does that leave us? If I had to bet, I’d say that Skinny Jeanz and a Mic will be the last time we hear from the New Boyz, but the duo show just enough skill on the album to provide a glimmer of hope. If Ben J and Legacy can put aside the lame R&B attempts and focus on making their unique brand of hip-hop, they could have some life in the game. And if they can’t, well, there’s gonna be a lot of people donating their skinny jeans to the Salvation Army in a couple years.
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Straight from djbooth.net
I hate to see men, especially black men wear skinny jeans.
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Member Since: 7/28/2008
Posts: 4,613
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Quote:
Originally posted by 1-N-Only21
Irv, i hope you didn't write all that crap.................. 
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of course not got that from DJ booth i don't have time to write a review like that especially bout an album i don't care 4
and Love Is Love

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Member Since: 12/12/2004
Posts: 17,160
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SKirvy ....
& skinny jeans look better on black guys than white guys imo .. the white guys i've seen wear actual WOMENS jeans [IMG]http://******************/afraid-smiley-9553.gif[/IMG]
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Member Since: 7/28/2008
Posts: 4,613
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Quote:
Originally posted by Delicious
SKirvy ....
& skinny jeans look better on black guys than white guys imo .. the white guys i've seen wear actual WOMENS jeans [IMG]http://******************/afraid-smiley-9553.gif[/IMG]
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yes?
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Member Since: 7/28/2008
Posts: 4,613
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Quote:
Originally posted by Delicious
& skinny jeans look better on black guys than white guys imo .. the white guys i've seen wear actual WOMENS jeans [IMG]http://******************/afraid-smiley-9553.gif[/IMG]
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not really...look wit it did to our guud sis Oprah

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Member Since: 5/5/2009
Posts: 4,479
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yea y'all caught me slippin' the other night.i'll never wear a pair of skinny jeans.
& as far as the album goes.......i'd give it a 5/10 because of "Cricketz" & "Dot Com".
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Member Since: 12/12/2004
Posts: 17,160
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Quote:
Originally posted by hEz_iRvy_iRv

yes?
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you will not cast shade on the #1 rap album of the year 
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Member Since: 12/12/2004
Posts: 17,160
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Quote:
Originally posted by chi-town_kidd
& as far as the album goes.......i'd give it a 5/10 because of "Cricketz" & "Dot Com".
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T00 LATE, you already said 6! that slick edit doesnt count 
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Member Since: 5/5/2009
Posts: 4,479
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Quote:
Originally posted by Delicious
you already said 6 that edit doesnt count 
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how you gone say my edit doesn't count & then you go off & edit yoself.
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Member Since: 7/28/2008
Posts: 4,613
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Quote:
Originally posted by Delicious
you will not cast shade on the #1 rap album of the year 
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Member Since: 11/30/2007
Posts: 26,796
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104k vs. ???
Guess who's who. 
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Member Since: 7/28/2008
Posts: 4,613
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Quote:
Originally posted by Flashing Lights
104k vs. ???
Guess who's who. 
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i was searching for them on the charts also...what are they numbers?
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