The music wasn’t polished like, say, a Death Row or Bad Boy album, and it was rough around the edges, but it worked…it worked for the hood. The singles were respectable, and thus, the highlights on the album, as they played to the popularity of the samples (“ I Always Feel Like” jacked Rockwell’s only hit “ Watching Me,” and “ Fedz” shamelessly ripped Aaliyah’s “ If Your Girl Only Knew”). Mia X was a standout to me she showed out every time she made a cameo appearance. Silkk The Shocker had dropped the “The Shocker” LP by then, but after running it once, I pretty much ignored it, and him, because I couldn’t get over the speech impediment that spilled into his rap delivery, and C-Murder, well, I hadn’t heard of him prior to “Tru 2 Da Game.” Neither one of them were the best rappers in the world, but as I sat there getting my arm tortured for 3 hours, this was the only album we listened to, and honestly, it wasn’t a bad album. I’d heard a few joints from Master P prior to that ( Ice Cream Man, Is There a Heaven for a Gangsta?), but he wasn’t a household name just yet. I’ll admit it, Personally, I wasn’t a fan of these guys. They played that joint about 3 times before letting the rest of the album run.Ĭheck It Out: Master P, Mystikal, Silkk the Shocker & Mia X Slay No Limit Reunion Performance The next song, “ No Limit Soldiers” was the unanimous favorite of everybody in the crib, and on the house. First thing I heard was Master P, talking to his son (who we’d come to know as Lil’ Romeo) about some basic hood facts of life. I’m over there, and my mans pressed play.
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