2008 Hip Hop Albums

What Hip Hop Albums And Singles Where The Best Of 2008?
My favorite rapper is Flo Rida and I loved Mail on Sunday with the hits low and elevator. Also Plies ripped it with The Definition Of Real with Bust it Baby idk why but ppl went nuts over that track. Ludacris as well with his album and his hit One More Drink. What albums and hits did you like?
O yea The Recession By Jeezy Ripped it The Carter 3 was a descrase
Paper Trail By T.i As Well Ripped it
I liked:
“The Renaissance” by Q-Tip
“Untitled” by Nas
“Tha Carter III” by Lil Wayne
“Paper Trail” by T.I.
“The Recession” by Young Jeezy
and “Evolver” by John Legend, if that counts.
In The Heights – Recording Session, 2008 Grammy Award Winner (Best Cast Album)
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Center Stage: Turn It Up $4.65 Self-taught dancer Rachele Brooke Smith dreams of training at New York’s American Academy of Ballet. But when the audition she left everything behind for doesn’t go as planned, Smith learns that sometimes being good isn’t enough. She then takes to a hip hop club for some important lessons, with the aid of a hunky ex-hockey player. Sequel also stars Peter Gallagher, Sarah Jayne Jensen. 95 min. Wide… |
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One Love – The Bob Marley All-Star Tribute $14.48 Conceived with DVD release in mind, this high-end, live video concert taped in Jamaica lives up to its title with a generous repertoire of Bob Marley songs performed by reverent pop, hip-hop, rock, and reggae veterans. Shot on a rainy night in December 1999, the home video version expands upon an inaugural TNT cable telecast with an additional hour of performances. The DVD edition adds a premium … |
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Notorious B.I.G.: Business Instead of Game $3.93 BUSINESS INSTEAD OF GAME UNAUTHORIZED – DVD Movie… |
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Hip Hop Speaks to Children with CD: A Celebration of Poetry with a Beat (Poetry Speaks Experience) $9.58 Grade 4-8-This anthology highlights the use of rhythm and vernacular in hip-hop, rap, and African-American poetry. The 51 pieces-which also include a passage from Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech-use gospel rhythms, “hambone” rhythms (which Giovanni explains in her informative introduction), jazz and blues rhythms, and language from the fields and the city streets. Artists range from L… |