16.09.2019

Chief Keef Finally Rich Zip

Chief Keef Finally Rich Zip Average ratng: 3,7/5 3237 reviews
  1. Chief Keef Finally Rich Zip Download
  2. Chief Keef Finally Rich Zip

Chicago, IL Hip-Hop/Rap 90,245 Downloads

Pop A Niigahh Sloowwww Like Criscoooo!!!! -Chief Ker -Citgo. February 6, 2013 at 1:45 pm. Find album reviews, stream songs, credits and award information for Finally Rich - Chief Keef on AllMusic - 2012 - Lumbering up the charts by mixing simple hooks Find album reviews, stream songs, credits and award information for Finally Rich - Chief Keef on AllMusic - 2012 - Lumbering up the charts by mixing simple hooks.

About Chief Keef

Kicking his career off at the age of 16 with the street single 'I Don't Like,' rapper Chief Keef was a hit on Chicago's high school circuit before mixtapes and viral videos led to a contract with Interscope. Born Keith Cozart in Chicago, Keef first hit with 2011's 'Bang,' a slow-rolling, simple cut that was an instant hit with the youth of his hometown's South Side. The mixtapes The Glory Road and Bang were both released that year by Keef's label, Glory Boyz, but at the end of 2011, the rapper was arrested for unlawful use of a weapon, having pointed a gun at a police officer. In early 2012, Keef was finishing his sentence of house arrest at his grandmother's home as his track 'I Don't Like' was topping a million views on video-sharing sites. It caught the attention of Kanye West, who completed a remix of the track with Big Sean, Pusha T, and Jadakiss all added to the mix. The single landed on Finally Rich, his debut album released late in 2012 by Interscope. 50 Cent, Young Jeezy, and Rick Ross made guest appearances, while production came from the likes of Young Chop and Mike Will Made-It. Late that same year, as the Chicago Police announced the MC was being investigated due to a possible connection in a shooting death, a video of Keef at a gun range triggered a parole violation investigation that ended in 2013 with a two-month sentence in a juvenile detention facility. Interscope dropped the artist a year later, and in early 2015, while the rapper was under house arrest due to more parole violations, a planned concert with Keef beamed in as a hologram was canceled when the venue was pressured by Chicago's City Hall. It didn't stop the release of music, as the MC issued four mixtapes, as well as a pair of LPs -- Bang 3 and Nobody 2 -- at the close of 2015. In 2017, on New Year's Day, he released Two Zero One Seven, followed that summer by his fifth official full-length, Thot Breaker.

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Lumbering up the charts by mixing simple hooks with plenty of gun talk, Chief Keef's career rolled out like he was Soulja Boy enrolled as a No Limit soldier. That's an interesting combination, and his signature hit, 'I Don't Like,' was even attractive from a safe distance, but wave a gun in the air like you just don't care and there's a number of grieving mothers anxious to call you out. Add to that the fact that Chief Keef can work a pistol with ease at the age of 17, that he came out of America's new murder capital of Chicago, and that his cocksure, knucklehead music was embraced by other -- arguably impressionable -- teens, and his music threatened to undo the good work Common, Lupe Fiasco, and other Second City heroes had done. If the idea of his debut album, Finally Rich, makes your moral compass spin off center, then know that it's everything awful that you expected, nothing more, nothing less. Keef boasts that he's rap's new boss and yet offers nothing new or game changing, and the justification for his cold steel lifestyle is 'the game in a mother' delivered in intelligible mumbles. For anyone following his rise through mixtapes, these things are expected, but for those who held out hope that his debut would provide some inexcusably guilty pleasure in a Neanderthal style, well, there's probably an EP's worth. 'I Don't Like' and 'Love Sosa' deliver, but collaborative tracks are a problem with folks like 50 Cent, Young Jeezy, and Rick Ross finding no chemistry with Keef, and as bands get snapped, bottles get popped, and somebody's loved one gets capped; there's no relief or pause in the onslaught, making this an endurance test in one sitting. Producers like Young Chop and Mike Will Made-It envelope Keef's primal lyrics in suitably primal beats, pushing the album away from major-label land and into more suitable mixtape territory, where the grime and narrowness feel appropriate. In the end, it's raw, irresponsible, unforgiving, and often infectious, but the controversial Finally Rich isn't a step forward on any counts. Consider this the guiltiest of pleasures, if considered at all.

SampleTitle/ComposerPerformerTimeStream
1 3:25
2 3:02
3 4:53
4 3:10
5 4:40
6 3:07
7 3:47
8 3:05
9 3:38
10 4:04
11 3:28
12 4:08
Chief

Chief Keef Finally Rich Zip

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