Be warned: while the music is glittery gold, Trick's mouth can get porno-store filthy and 'J.O.D.D.' Could make Larry Flynt blush. Even the skits are worth repeated listens, and although the album runs over an hour, you'd be hard-pressed to find a track to skip. He's corrected some errors made last time out by tightening up his poignant numbers to be more on-point, and the production is light years ahead of anything else he's ever done. If that isn't enough star power for you, Money Mark, Ying Yang Twins, and that long-lost Southern diva Khia join the party, but this is Trick's album all the way. 's yelp from 'Crazy Train' adds to the chaos of 'Let's Go,' featuring and an especially hot. An obscure track, 'Sugar on My Tongue,' is the oddball basis for the excellent jam 'Sugar (Gimme Some)' with Cee-Lo and guesting. 's soulful voice on the guitar-filled 'I Cry' is just one of many astonishing curve balls the album throws the listener, every one of them crossing the plate. It's an ambitious album with 17 tracks and packed with guest stars - ones you'd expect and one you wouldn't, like. Too bad, since is his and would have him blowing up big time if it weren't for his awfully nasty, MTV-unfriendly mouth and the widespread fear of down-bottom Southern rap. Being a true, sleazy thug might always keep him from reaching 's poptacular, always-on-MTV success. Growing in strength like his Southern brothers, has released one high-quality album after another, each one expanding on the best moments of the last one.
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