Browse Music
Rock & Pop
R&B & Hip-Hop
Country
Blues
Jazz
Classical
Latin
Christian
Soundtracks
Collections
Hush
Bulletproof
Hush:  Bulletproof

$6.99
Listen Parental Advisory

Album Review

Released: 2005
Label: Listen Up
Selection #: 162291
Detroit rapper sharpens his rhyme to cut through killer beats. W/guests Eminem, Talib Kweli, others. Fired Up, Off To Tijuana (w/D12), Let It Breathe, etc.
Listen RM WM
1 My Introduction
2 Fired Up
3 Hush Is Coming
4 Let It Breathe
5 Put 'Em Down (Shake the Ground)
6 Real T.V.
7 The March
8 24 Hours
9 Superstar
10 Off to Tijuana
11 Woodpecker
12 Rock Sh*t
  
Download Player:    Real Media Real Media    Windows Media Windows Media
Album Review

Whether it is on his own or with his crew Da Ruckus, rapper Hush has been in the game since 1993. There are 12 long years of hard work and missed opportunities -- including a one-year federal prison sentence for robbery -- leading up to his debut, and the hungry "Bulletproof" sounds like an album that's been itching to bust out for over a decade, sometimes to a fault. One more reflective number would have fleshed out Hush's character more, but "Bulletproof" isn't so much about looking back as it is forward, along with living in the now. The "living in the now" part comes from worthy club numbers like the Jay-Z-flavored "Let It Breathe" and the very Eminem "Off To Tijuana," which not only features D12 but also sounds like it could have fallen off their last album. D12 member Bizarre guests on "Real T.V." and declares it "real Detroit ghetto sh*t," which the track most certainly is, but the album as a whole is put together with an attitude that's less gutter. Skit-free and with a tight track list, "Bulletproof" is concise and out to prove something, almost to the point that it's demanding classic status. The reason to gripe so much about the flow is that taken one by one, the tracks are very good, sometimes excellent, and always vivid. Hush's mixtape past could have helped the flow of an album that's "eye of the tiger" one minute and "I'm a playboy" the next, but if he needs to get these disjointed bangers out to make way for his grand, cohesive full-length, so be it. His guitar-filled street music is tough and deep, and if there's a Detroiter who can unite the Shadyville, Kid Rock, and Twiztid camps, it's the multi-faceted Hush. "Bulletproof" doesn't quite figure out the best way to present the talented rapper, but it's a problem debuts from lesser hip-hoppers wish they were burdened with. ~ David Jeffries, All Music Guide

Back To Top
About This Artist
Biography

Related Artists
Obie Trice

Any reproduction, publication, further distribution, or public exhibition of materials provided at this site, in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited.
©2006 All Media Guide, LLC
Portions of content provided by All Music Guide®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC