The Blueprint˛: The Gift & the Curse EXPLICIT LYRICS Jay-Z

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CD

  • Release Date: 11/12/2002
  • 2 Disc Set
  • Sales Rank: 22,322
  • Label: ROC-A-FELLA
  • UPC: 044006338125
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CD$12.59
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

It was only a matter of time before Jay-Z dropped a double disc. Fortunately for his fans, like a fine wine, the Brooklyn rapper seems to get better with time. Although it makes a few missteps, the sequel to 2001's critically hailed The Blueprint features some of the hottest joints of the Jigga Man's career. The album's first and overall weaker disc, subtitled The Gift, comes off a little like hip-hop karaoke, as Hova gratuitously cops material from 2Pac (" '03 Bonnie & Clyde," featuring Beyoncé Knowles), Dr. Dre ("The Watcher 2," featuring Rakim, Truth Hurts, and the Doc himself), Digital Underground ("All Around the World"), and the Notorious B.I.G. ("A Dream," featuring Big's widow, Faith Evans). But it isn't totally a derivative dud. "The Bounce" is yet another grade-A, Timbaland-Hova collaboration, and Jay perfects his Dirty South flow alongside Big Boi from OutKast and other members of the Dungeon Family clique on "Poppin' Tags." It's on Disc 2, The Curse, however, that Jay picks up steam. He indulges his rock jones on the Heavy D–produced "Guns & Roses," featuring Lenny Kravitz singing and playing on the guitar hook, and tries to score heaven points by admitting to random acts of charity for Columbine and 9/11 on "Some People Hate." The Curse ends with the live-sounding, Neptunes-produced "A Ballad for a Fallen Soldier," where Jay waxes poetic about the parallels between the lives of a soldier and a hustler. Although it would have been a better single disc, The Blueprint 2 solidifies the foundation of Jay-Z's now-sprawling hip-hop empire. Ron Hart, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

Blueprint: The Gift & the Curseby Anonymous

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February 14, 2006: This C.D is fire. You would think since he has a double disc that he might slack a little but he didn't each song is just as good as the 1 before. "Meet the Parents" that was jus 2 deep. And "Gunz and Roses" fire now thats some lyrical content 4 ya!

Blueprint: The Gift & the Curseby Anonymous

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August 10, 2004: Jay-Z has seen better days lyrically. The lyrics on this album are dull for the most part and the songs really succeed from the guests and the beats. "The Dream" is a classic hip-hop tribute song, dedicated to Notorious B.I.G. and even featuring his first verse from the legendary "Juicy". "The Watcher 2" is another great song that Jay seems to be lyrically an A on his lengthy verse and Dr. Dre and Rakim both deliver excellant follow up verses. "03 Bonnie & Clyde" is a robbery from 2Pac's "Me & My Girfriend", but both versions seem to be good to me. "What They Gonna Do" is a kinda reggaeish club song that only survives because of the chorus, beat, and Sean Paul's parts. "The Bounce" is a great club song as is "Poppin Tags"(which features Twista, Killer Mike, and Big Boi). Now the 2nd disk is a lil better, but not by much. The opening song "Diamond Is Forever" succeeds from good rhymes and a great beat. "Guns & Roses" is a good song with Lenny Kravitz and "Meet The Parents" is a sad story song that tends to get a little hard to follow at times. "Some People Hate" is a good song with a good beat and a great chorus. "Blueprint 2" is a good song with a great beat and okay rhymes. "A Ballad For A Fallen Soldier" is a good song, but sounds out of place for a reason. "B****** & Sisters" is also an okay song. Besides these mentioned songs, the album isn't very good. Luckily, Jay gave us "The Black Album", which is alot better then this one. Still you should get this, just don't expect a classic.


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