Thoughts Of A Predicate Felon (Explicit Version) (2005)

Artist: Tony Yayo
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Product Summary
UPC: 00602498828069
Release Date: 8/30/2005
Buy.com Sku: 63982481
Item#: M2DKKW
Buy.com Sales Rank: 25079
Format:  CD

Song Listing

Disc 1
Song TitleSample
1. Intro ~ Tony Yayo
2. Homicide ~ Tony Yayo
3. It Is What It Is - (with Spider Loc) ~ Tony Yayo
4. Tattle Teller ~ Tony Yayo
5. So Seductive - (with 50 Cent) ~ Tony Yayo
6. Eastside Westside ~ Tony Yayo
7. Drama Setter - (with Eminem/Obie Trice) ~ Tony Yayo
8. We Don't Give A F*** - (with 50 Cent/Lloyd Banks/Olivia) ~ Tony Yayo
9. Pimpin ~ Tony Yayo
10. Curious - (with Joe) ~ Tony Yayo
11. I'm So High ~ Tony Yayo
12. Love My Style ~ Tony Yayo

(P) 2005 G Unit/Interscope Records
(C) 2005 G Unit/Interscope Records

What's your life like? Tony Yayo's is real. G-Unit's incarcerated scarface, who's bounced in and out of federal penitentiaries during 50 Cent's ascension to the top of the pops, is real, like milk. And his debut album, undoubtedly the most long coming and anticipated release from G-Unit, Thoughts Of A Predicate Felon, bleeds this reality. "My album is all fact no fiction," says the 26 year-old Yayo, "Everything on there is things I've done or seen--as a matter of fact, most of the album was written in jail and that's why the aggressive records are so hard." Replete with brooding, violent beats, courtesy of super-producers like Dr. Dre, Eminem and Havoc of Mobb Deep, and vicious punch lines, Thoughts promises to be G-Unit's most street release. "I been with 50 since day one, so I've studied the way that he makes records," he says, "So I know you gotta make the club records and the records for girls, but I also know that what makes G-Unit G-Unit is we make the best street records in the industry."
 
Album Notes and Credits

Notes & Personnel Info
Personnel: Tony Yayo (rap vocals); 50 Cent (vocals, rap vocals); D. Prosper, Olivia (vocals); Eminem, G-Unit, Lloyd Banks, Obie Trice, Spider Loc (rap vocals); Anthony Burgess, Steven King (guitar); Jeff Bass, Luis Resto (keyboards); Tsehay Hailu (background vocals); Jagged Edge (vocals).
Audio Mixers: Eminem; Mauricio "Veto" Irragorri; Patrick Viala; Steve Baughman; Steven King; Carlos Bess.
Photographer: Jonathan Mannion.
It's near impossible to ignore all the drama that colored the release of Thoughts of a Predicate Felon. Tony Yayo, the mythical fourth member of G-Unit, was locked up during his crew's rise to supreme power, big boss Eminem wore a "Free Yayo" shirt to the Grammys, and just when everyone throws on their "Yayo's Home" shirt, the man lands himself lands another jail sentence within 12 hours of getting out, because of a forged passport he handed to a parole officer. Course, everything associated with 50 Cent and crew has such hype leading up to it that you'd think the hood closes shop for a day to honor the release date, but the events in the weeks right before this drop date tell a different story. The album was leaked across the Internet like a dam busted, and nobody at the label seemed to mind and didn't bother to push the release date up. Plus, the guy finally gets his shot and lands the same release week as Time cover boy Kanye West's sophomore debut. All this hype and then all eyes on Kanye? It's actually crazy like a fox because Yayo's album is unable to support the big build-up, so let Kanye draw the five-star reviews while Internet downloaders sing the praises of the album's excellent highlights to their homies. Yayo's craftier and smarter than expected considering the thug myth built around him. He handles hooky party numbers like "So Seductive" extremely well, he drops the occasional stinger that draws a "damn!" and even on the lukewarm bedroom number "Curious" with Joe, he saves face with a decent flow over the sickeningly slick production. He has the fiercest growl and bite in the G-Unit family, but he's also a loose canon who delivers a clumsy dis at Fat Joe during the otherwise hot "Tattle Teller" and delivers a euphemism for the female anatomy that would make R. Kelly embarrassed on the horribly titled "Project Princess." Maybe 50 handled Yayo with too much reverence and not enough grooming, but if Predicate Felon only offers a few tracks of interest to the general hip-hopper, it offers a bit more to the loyal G-Unit soldier. He bleeds hood from his veins and while Young Buck and Lloyd Banks benefited greatly from the polish, Yayo is rightfully served some of the toughest bangers and darkest cuts from the crew. Add another exciting production from Eminem ("Drama Setter") and a whimsical highlight in the fourth quarter ("Dear Suzie"), and you've got an album worth every G-Unit fan's attention. If he held back any longer the myth was going to blow up in his face. Sneaking an uneven but occasionally thrilling hood album out under Kanye's shadow is another stroke of brilliance from 50's marketing department and excellent way to transition Yayo from monolithic myth to gutsy second-line soldier. ~ David Jeffries
On 50 Cent posse G Unit's platinum first release, 2004's BEG FOR MERCY, Tony Yayo appears as a ghost, pictured in the flap but unable to rap on the record due to his incarceration on a weapons charge. When Yayo was freed from prison he cut his debut solo record, THOUGHTS OF A PREDICATE FELON. It bears the mark of a man releasing a lifetime of pent-up rhymes in a torrent, yet he delivers his raps with the kind of deliberation that helped made Biggie Smalls a household name.
The album opens on a note befitting its title, as Yayo spins a grim tale of vengeance on "Homicide," followed by glimpses of violent autobiography on "It Is What It Is" and a scathing indictment of snitches on "Tattle Teller." Despite his harsh presence, Yayo excels on tracks of love and desire, as on the soulful slow jam, "Curious," and the brash club crawler, "So Seductive." However, these respites from the dark are rare, as Yayo and the ever-ready Eminem make plain on "Drama Setter," where Yayo's disturbingly focused lyrics are consummate tension builders. THOUGHTS OF A PREDICATE FELON has the feel of a horror movie, but the kind where the terrors are the products of a tortured mind.

Producer: Domingo; Eminem; Havoc; L. T. Moe; J.R. Rotem; Anthony Burgess; Ron Brownz; Focus; Jeff Bass; Luis Resto; Punch; Sam Sneed; Black Jeruz; Domingo; Sebb; Focus Distrbution Group; Havoc

Engineer: L. T. Moe; Tony Campana; Kyla Miller; Steve Simmons; Taurus Scott; Wesley Morris; Pat Viala

Musical Guests
50 Cent
Eminem
Obie Trice
Lloyd Banks
Joe
Jagged Edge
G-Unit

 
Compilation Appearances
Get Rich Or Die Tryin (Explicit Version)
Get Rich Or Die Tryin (Clean Version)
New Breed,The 0403
Hunger For More (Explicit Version)
Hunger For More
Straight Outta Cashville (Explicit Version)
Documentary (Explicit Version)
Massacre (Clean)
Get Rich or Die Tryin' (Explicit Version)
Fidel Cashflow
Blood Money (Clean Version)
Massacre (Explicit Version)
Rotten Apple (Cln)
Rotten Apple(Explicit Version)
Chemistry Files:vol 1
50 Cent Is The Future
This Is East Coast Hip Hop(Explicit Version)
Hip Hop Is Dead: G-unit Radio Pt 22
Timbaland Presents Shock Value
Ain't Nothing Like Me
Timbaland Presents Shock Value (Cln)
G-unit Radio 5:All Eyez O
Return Of The Mixtape Millionare G Un
So Seductive G Unit Radio 12
Bulletproof Radio
Curtis (Explicit Version)
Curtis
Gangsta Grillz The Album(Explicit Version)
Gangsta Grillz The Album
Return Of Thr Body Snatchers
Money Moves The World(Explicit Version)

 
Associated Artists and Works
Kid, DJ Whoo
Various Artists
Various Artists

 
Technical Info
Release Date : 08/30/2005
Original Release Date : 2005
Catalog ID : 4873
Label : Interscope Records (USA)
Number of Discs : 1
Studio/Live : Studio
Mono/Stereo : Stereo
SPAR Code : n/a
UPC : 00602498828069

 
Professional Reviews
Rolling Stone (No. 984, p.152)
- 3 stars out of 5 - "...Like every G Unit release, FELON wraps its gun violence and over-the-top boasts in opulent, catchy streetscapes..."

Vibe (pp.143-144)
- 3.5 discs out of 5 - "[T]hough Yayo holds his own playing the role of the uberthug dominating the club, it's his incarcerated Scarface mind-set that makes the strongest impression."

 
Bio
Tony Yayo

During the mid-nineties while 50 made inroads to the industry, working with Jam Master Jay and then the Trackmasters, Yayo got his rep up on the battle circuit bringing it to other Queens rappers like local stars, the Lost Boyz.. "I was taking everybody out back then," he remembers. But just when 50 was about make his leap to stardom he was gunned down with the infamous 9 slugs. But the two, now joined by young boy Lloyd Banks, turned the seeming tragedy to triumph. "As soon as 50 recovered we went to work on the mixtapes," says Yayo who loyally played his position despite the seemingly insurmountable opposition against them, "and that's when he created G-Unit." The trio went to war with the industry that was afraid to touch them and recorded "Bad News", Yayo's first official vocal appearance, and then went to work on 50 Cent Is The Future, which secured Fif his fortuitous Shady/Aftermath deal. Yayo stood out on the early mixtapes due to his unbridled energy and laugh out loud punchlines, which anchored the nimble wordplay of Banks and sing-songy fluidness of 50.
 


  
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