With the two hundred seventy-eighth pick of the draft, Mr. Slim Citrus selects:
Scarface, The Fix (2002)
The last of the albums on my actual draft board, the rest of my picks will either be re-peats from my first island, or "wild card" selections. The Fix is my favorite Scarface album from beginning to end: it doesn't have as many of my favorite songs, but it doesn't pancake like some of his other albums do. This is actually my go-to album for when Pops and I go to Atlanta Dream home games, and the team is undefeated when I'm able to play it in the first half, although it only seems to work when I'm actually at the arena. Face wrote and performed every track, and also collaborated with some of the more well-known producers in hip-hop.
It's also a part of my PT rotation, on my non-cardio days.
The Fix was somewhat less than commercially: while it did debut at Number Four on the Billboard 200 (and Number One on Billboard's Hip-Hop/R&B chart), and sold 159,000 copies in its first week, it disappeared from the charts almost immediately, not even earning a gold certification, the first album by Face to fail to do so. Still, it did receive a good deal of positive critical acclaim, and earned "five mics" in The Source, the only album to do so between 2002 and 2005 (cite: Wikipedia).
Scarface, The Fix (2002)
The last of the albums on my actual draft board, the rest of my picks will either be re-peats from my first island, or "wild card" selections. The Fix is my favorite Scarface album from beginning to end: it doesn't have as many of my favorite songs, but it doesn't pancake like some of his other albums do. This is actually my go-to album for when Pops and I go to Atlanta Dream home games, and the team is undefeated when I'm able to play it in the first half, although it only seems to work when I'm actually at the arena. Face wrote and performed every track, and also collaborated with some of the more well-known producers in hip-hop.
It's also a part of my PT rotation, on my non-cardio days.
The Fix was somewhat less than commercially: while it did debut at Number Four on the Billboard 200 (and Number One on Billboard's Hip-Hop/R&B chart), and sold 159,000 copies in its first week, it disappeared from the charts almost immediately, not even earning a gold certification, the first album by Face to fail to do so. Still, it did receive a good deal of positive critical acclaim, and earned "five mics" in The Source, the only album to do so between 2002 and 2005 (cite: Wikipedia).