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Trilla (Bonus Track Version)

Rick Ross

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iTunes Review

Rick Ross has remained faithful to the immortal gangster parable of Scarface, a story set in his hometown of Miami. Like Tony Montana, Ross favors the gaudy and the exorbitant over the subtle and the clever, but he also shares something deeper with Pacino’s monomaniacal hustler: his ruthless cunning. From its list of superstar cameos to its pack of top-sheld producers, Trilla is an album designed to succeed at any cost. To bask in the opulence of “This is the Life” or “Luxury Tax” is to imagine oneself a boss, overseeing a kingdom from the roof of a Miami mini-palace. While Ross’s modus operandi is extravagance beyond all reasonable imagination, Trilla throws its audience a couple of outstanding curveballs. On the J.R. Rotem-produced “The Boss,” synthesizers are indistinguishable from human voices, and the song’s undulating, otherwordly tones make for a mood that is as haunted as it is fearless. In “Money Make Me Come,” sex, drugs, and money are folded into a single potent obsession; a culmination of sin and sleaze, the song is Ross’s truest moment to date.

Customer Reviews

Rick Ross-Trilla

The MIA boss is back with his sophomore disc, Trilla. With a large guest list and strong production, here is how Ross faired. Trilla Intro: A synth heavy production by J.U.S.T.I.C.E. League that isn't that great. Ross flows over it giving shoutouts to his homies, but it is just a dull intro. 2.5/5 All I Have In This World (Japanese Denim): Mannie Fresh drops some banging production with strings, as Ross drops the same typical cliched rhymes that bring the track down. Featuring a catchy hook and sample, the track fails to meet potential. 3/5 The Boss: J.R.'s eerie chorus meets a solid T-Pain hook and verse that truly makes the song. Even though I am getting sick of T-Pain, its really his ability here to blend with the track that makes this a single. Ross raps about being the boss, having broads, money and the hustle. 4/5 Speedin: The Runners brings some triumphant horns to introduce Ross' return. R. Kelly kills the chorus and verse making the track the summer time banger it is, as Ross does his thing with the boss flow. Solid single, not his strongest but a nice summer banger. 4/5 We Shinin: Bink!'s features some soulful production he's known for, its uplifting and feel good, however Ross doesn't quite match with the music. The hook is totally wack, as the track ends up being a mismatch of solid beat, overpowering rapper. 2.5/5 Money Make Me C**: Drumma Boy delivers a strip club banger, as Ross & Ebonylove trade parts on the hook of this freaky cut. Ross spits about the h**s and how they assist him in his hustle and how he helps them by paying. Solid club banger. 3.5/5 This Is The Life: Elvis has that Miami sound, of lovely horns and organs making a grand feel. Trey Songz hook is only more help, as he sings about the champagne, h**s, money and the grander aspects of material wealth. Boss does his thing and makes this track shine, due to the assistance with him. 3.5/5 This Me: DJ Toomp's triumphant and grand MIA horns allow Boss to brag about his wealth. The track has a repetitive hook that isn't bad, but I have to say the production is so good, it doesn't matter what Ross is spitting, as long as he gets by. Decent track. 3/5 Here I Am: Drumma Boy creates a fast paced blast of life with a weak Avery Storm hook, but Ross & Nelly are on point creating a solid collab. Nelly's sing songy style works real nicely with the piano string production.The track is a highlight and one of the many strong productions. 3.5/5 Maybach Music: J.U.S.T.I.C.E. League produces the next three track starting with this Jay-Z collab. The relaxing and mellow mood flows smoothly, as the title explains it all, especially the mood. Jay drops another strong, show stealing performance on this one. 3.5/5 Billionaire: Ross at his lyrical best, as the production fits and the Boss handles biz here. Spitting "Well not I'm established, I f*** with heroine cause it sell the fastest", admitting to how he is and the reason for it, by being brutally honest. Its a highlight for Ross. 3.5/5 Luxury Tax: Wayne spits "they say I couldn't play football, because I was too small, they say I couldn't play basketball because I wasn't tall, they say I couldn't play baseball at all, yet everday I BALL!" which leads into Ross' decent verse. Weezy's hook is a little too complicated for the track and seems out of place, but Jeezy & Trick Daddy drop solid guest appearances on this guest filled track. 3.5/5 Reppin My City: Carlos & Dada deliver a decent production, as the repetitive hook of reppin my city, does get tiresome. Ross' group Triple C (Carol City Cartel) and fellow Floridian rapper, Brisco spit about the streets, hood, block, glocks, and typical gangster cliched topics. Its decent, but is brought down, due to how much it has been done. DJ Khaled had two tracks on each of his albums "The Future Of Dade" & "B**** I'm From Dade County" that both represent their city, so its a little worn out this third time around. 2.5/5 I'm Only Human: The track is the emotional one of the album, lyrically it isn't bad, but doesn't fully connect to the listener. Rodney's hook isn't bad, as the track is more uplifting than sad. Ross admits he makes mistakes here and its nice to hear the meaningful lyrics. He throws the mood off however with a unnecessary and ridiculous line of "dead beat dad, but he far from dead, he didn't know chocolate milk made you fart real bad". 3/5 Ross' sophomore disc is everything you expect, very similar to his debut, Port Of Miami. It is filled with great productions, cliched gangsta lyrics and topics, good guest features and a MIA feel. The sunny, triumphant happy productions are Miami based, as "We Shinin" has a soulful sample but overpowering Ross lyrics, "This Is The Life" is a solid collab with Trey Songz about the grand life, "This Me" is Ross simply bragging about his wealth, power. "Maybach Music"'s mood is well done by the J.U.S.T.I.C.E. League, as Jay totally steals the show with his verse. "Billionaire" is Ross' best moment on the album lyrically, featuring a solid hook the track works. "Luxury Tax" is a group cut that features assistance from Jeezy, Weezy and Trick Daddy. "I'm Only Human" is a mediocre emotional track, "Reppin My City" is too cliched of a topic, "All I Have In This World" features some lazy lyricism, but "Here I Am" is a solid collab with Nelly and Ross about the fast life. Overall its banging beats, horns, organs that have cliched gangsta lyricism from Ross that get by on guest features or production. This album is for those who love bangers, the MIA movement of Fat Joe, Ross, Wayne, Jeezy, Plies, Trick Daddy, Khaled among others and the south. Predictable second album, that I felt falls a little short of matching his debut, Port Of Miami, nonetheless and enjoyable album of production, with typical lyricism. Rating: 7 out of 10

Trillaaaa

dang, the boss is back. this album i think def is much better then his previous album. the only songs that were in my opinion any good were hustlin and push it. there were a few others that were decent but nothing amazing this album has some really hard hitting beats,that kind of sound like something that would be on a kanye or jay-z album. featuring appearences by t-pain, lil wayne, jay- z, and nelly this album has alot to offer to those with a more main stream taste, or just looking for a great album with some nice street anthems. tracks to download -speedin -the boss -all i have in this world -here i am -maybach music -reppin my city - you know what just buy the whole album, seriously the beats on these songs are incredible and rick ross has deff improoved alot. almost every track is fire. the only problem i have is the dj kahled interlude nobody wants to hear this fool talk.

???????

Am I the only one tired of hearing the same boring drug dealer fairytales? The production on here has been wasted with more of the same simple garbage. Boooooo!

Biography

Born: 1977 in Carol City, FL

Genre: Hip Hop/Rap

Years Active: '00s, '10s

Tattooed with pictures of AK-47s, Miami's six-foot, 300-pound rap figure known as Rick Ross embraced his city's reputation for drug trafficking on his debut single, "Hustlin'," in 2006. While Atlanta and Houston artists were establishing their cities as Southern strongholds, Ross aimed at putting Miami back in rap's national spotlight. Ross, real name William Roberts, grew up in Carol City, Florida, an impoverished northern suburb of Miami. Influenced by artists like Luther Campbell and the Notorious...
Full Bio
Trilla (Bonus Track Version), Rick Ross
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