Thugs Are Us
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Thugs Are Us | ||
Studio album by Trick Daddy | ||
Released | March 20, 2001 | |
Genre | Southern Rap | |
Label | Slip-N-Slide, Warlock Records | |
Professional reviews | ||
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Trick Daddy chronology | ||
Books of Thugs: Chapter AK Verse 47 (2000) |
Thugs Are Us (2001) |
Thug Holiday (2002) |
Thugs Are Us is the third CD from Miami rapper Trick Daddy that came out in 2001 under Trick Daddy's Slip-N-Slide Records. With every subsequent album of his throughout the late '90s, Trick Daddy had taken a step further toward his long-awaited national breakthrough, and with Thugs Are Us he finally reached his elusive commercial summit, breaking out the South and into heavy rotation on every urban radio station in America. "Shut Up," the club anthem from his previous album, Book of Thugs (2000), had almost broken him through, just as "Nann Nigga" had nearly done so even earlier. Yet neither of those hits compare to what Trick Daddy delivers on Thugs Are Us. This is by far the Miami rapper's most impressive work to date, in terms of not just lyrics and beats but also commercial sensibility. Trick Daddy and his Slip-n-Slide team pull it all together on Thugs Are Us, especially on the album's highlights: the club-banging "Take It to da House," the commercial radio-serviced "I'm a Thug," and the Dirty South-rallying "Can't F**k With the South." On these songs, and to a lesser extent the others, Trick Daddy retains his thuggish posture yet also manages to integrate just enough of a parodic wink to make Thugs Are Us as accessible to the inner-city thugs as it is to the suburban wannabe-thugs. This shift is subtle yet nevertheless noteworthy. Representative of the Dirty South in all its tarnished grace yet accessible enough for the mainstream, Trick Daddy's tongue-in-cheek charm offsets his gold grill and tattoos, more so here than on any previous album. On the downside, like Book of Thugs before it, Thugs Are Us does frustratingly incorporate a plethora of guests, none of them superstars in their own right. Yet as it stands, unwanted hanger-ons and all, Thugs Are Us places Trick Daddy alongside Mystikal and Ludacris among the elite class of nationally sanctioned Dirty South rappers.
[edit] Track listing
- "Intro" – 0:33
- "I'm A Thug" – 4:14
- "Where U From" – 4:53
- "Noodle" – 3:35
- "Take It To Da House" (Feat. The SNS Express) – 3:46
- "Thump In The Trunk" (Skit) – 1:12
- "Can't F**k With The South" – 3:58
- "Survivin' The Drought" – 3:57
- "Pull Over [Remix]" – 3:31
- "Have My Cheese" – 2:54
- "Bricks & Marijuana" – 4:07
- "N Word" – 3:08
- "99 Problems" – 3:04
- "For All My Ladies" – 3:23
- "The Hotness" – 4:32
- "Somebody Shoulda Told Ya" – 3:51
- "Amerika" – 4:23
- "Duece Poppi Snippet[*]" – 3:42
- Track "Take It To Da House" contains a sample of "The Boss" performed by James Brown.
- It also features elements from "Boogie Shoes" by KC and the Sunshine Band.