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2 Chainz - B.O.A.T.S II has leaked. Original got removed cause of dumb tag rule. This thread is archived. New comments cannot be posted and votes cannot be cast. 108 points 7 years ago. Now we just need GTAV to leak and we're gucci. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 2013 CD release of B.O.A.T.S. II #METIME on Discogs. Yes, 2 Chainz forges deeper emotional connections, but that surface is as entrancing as ever. B.O.A.T.S II ups the production values like a true sequel should. Whereas his last album felt at times. 2 Chainz has enticed his fans to fork out for the deluxe edition of his latest album, B.O.A.T.S. II: Me Time, not only with a few extra tracks but with a series of recipes designed to link up with. II: Me Time is the second studio album by American rapper 2 Chainz. It was released on September 10, 2013. The album features guest appearances from Pharrell Williams, Drake, Lil Wayne.

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2 Chainz Boats Ii Me Time

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This review was published on ZouFeed.

2 Chainz Boats Ii

2 Chainz Boats Ii Download

Whether you like him or not, there's something undeniably alluring about Georgia rapper 2 Chainz. He's a 38-year-old thriving in a hip-hop scene saturated with youth. He has one of the most distinctive styles in rap, both musically and fashion-wise. And lying behind his facade of a thugged-out dope dealer is a former basketball star who attended Alabama State University on an athletic scholarship. He's idiosyncratic, for sure. But that quirkiness and charisma has yet to yield a immersive and cohesive LP needed to be a top tier rapper.

BOATS II: Me Time is the spiritual successor to 2 Chainz's first album, Based on a TRU Story — only a bit grimier. Where the first feels clean and poppy, the second exhibits a dirtier sound directly influenced by the Atlanta trap popularized by Gucci Mane's Bricksquad. 'Extra' sees him and exciting newcomer Rich Homie Quan spit over a sparse but menacing track dominated by deep brass and strings. 'Where You Been' is distortedly beautiful, accented by a vibrant glockenspiel and cinematic horns.

However, that's not to say he has completely abandoned those experiments at pop that were all over his first effort — on this album, those attempts even sound better and more fleshed-out than his first. There's the shape-shifting 'Employee of The Month', a song that one minute sounds like a light piano-driven pop hit and the next a scary, walloping banger. 'So We Can Live' features a classic T-Pain hook and a smooth R&B beat. He even recruits Fergie for a sultry chorus and surprisingly interesting verse on 'Netflix'. 2 Chainz has a good ear for melody, and over his career has developed a talent for making songs with compelling musical breaks and switchups.

2 chainz boats ii

It's lyrics like 'She got a big booty/ so I call her big booty' that have made 2 Chainz a poster child for a perceived regression in rap's lyrical content. There's definitely still some of those lazy moments ('Last name Chainz/ First name Two' on 'Extra'), and his constant efforts to sound like a street veteran occasionally results in off-putting bars like 'I'm working this iPhone, they need an app called iTrap.' It gets a little tiresome. But the ever self-aware 2 Chainz knows these gripes, and even addresses them on 'Black Unicorn'. He raps, 'Lyrically I could be Talib Kweli/ But with gold teeth it'd be hard for some to believe.' He's right, and that's why he sticks to his niche. However, he doesn't give himself enough credit. The album has a few glimmers of a leveled-up storytelling ability ('So We Can Live' elegantly recounts a particularly stressful encounter with police). It's the lazy moments that hurt BOATS II; but it's the flashes of brilliance that point to an even more intriguing third album.

2 Chainz Boats Ii

Chainz
Chainz

2 Chainz Boats Ii Download

Whether you like him or not, there's something undeniably alluring about Georgia rapper 2 Chainz. He's a 38-year-old thriving in a hip-hop scene saturated with youth. He has one of the most distinctive styles in rap, both musically and fashion-wise. And lying behind his facade of a thugged-out dope dealer is a former basketball star who attended Alabama State University on an athletic scholarship. He's idiosyncratic, for sure. But that quirkiness and charisma has yet to yield a immersive and cohesive LP needed to be a top tier rapper.

BOATS II: Me Time is the spiritual successor to 2 Chainz's first album, Based on a TRU Story — only a bit grimier. Where the first feels clean and poppy, the second exhibits a dirtier sound directly influenced by the Atlanta trap popularized by Gucci Mane's Bricksquad. 'Extra' sees him and exciting newcomer Rich Homie Quan spit over a sparse but menacing track dominated by deep brass and strings. 'Where You Been' is distortedly beautiful, accented by a vibrant glockenspiel and cinematic horns.

However, that's not to say he has completely abandoned those experiments at pop that were all over his first effort — on this album, those attempts even sound better and more fleshed-out than his first. There's the shape-shifting 'Employee of The Month', a song that one minute sounds like a light piano-driven pop hit and the next a scary, walloping banger. 'So We Can Live' features a classic T-Pain hook and a smooth R&B beat. He even recruits Fergie for a sultry chorus and surprisingly interesting verse on 'Netflix'. 2 Chainz has a good ear for melody, and over his career has developed a talent for making songs with compelling musical breaks and switchups.

It's lyrics like 'She got a big booty/ so I call her big booty' that have made 2 Chainz a poster child for a perceived regression in rap's lyrical content. There's definitely still some of those lazy moments ('Last name Chainz/ First name Two' on 'Extra'), and his constant efforts to sound like a street veteran occasionally results in off-putting bars like 'I'm working this iPhone, they need an app called iTrap.' It gets a little tiresome. But the ever self-aware 2 Chainz knows these gripes, and even addresses them on 'Black Unicorn'. He raps, 'Lyrically I could be Talib Kweli/ But with gold teeth it'd be hard for some to believe.' He's right, and that's why he sticks to his niche. However, he doesn't give himself enough credit. The album has a few glimmers of a leveled-up storytelling ability ('So We Can Live' elegantly recounts a particularly stressful encounter with police). It's the lazy moments that hurt BOATS II; but it's the flashes of brilliance that point to an even more intriguing third album.

2 Chainz Boats Ii

Though Chainz's lyricism has improved a smidge, it's the beats that really stand out. Layered with decadent instrumentation and consistently pounding bass, the music attempts to flash his wealth just as much as his lyrics. While not as rich-sounding as, say, Magna Carta Holy Grail, many of the tracks have a sense of importance and celebration that isn't found too often. They are still missing that sonic crispness that Chainz is so talented on (remember his verse on Drake's 'All Me'?), but that was probably a conscious choice to keep some of that Dirty South feel he was going for.

2 Chainz Boats Ii

2 Chainz won't ever be the GOAT — he's not taken seriously enough for that. But he is a rapper that will help define this generation of short-attention-span, wordplay-heavy rap. BOATS II may have better beats and more compelling song structures, but in the end it's Chainz's lazy lyrics that have come to characterize his rapping and hold him back from the top. Once his consistency rivals his rivals, he may have a shot at the upper echelon. It's an evolution that's still in progress; but at 38, does he have enough time to complete it?





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