 | |  |
| El Cartel: The Big Boss | 
| Artist: Daddy Yankee Label: Interscope Records Category: Music
List Price: $13.98 Buy New: $1.75 You Save: $12.23 (87%)
Buy New/Used from $0.01
Avg. Customer Rating:   (21 reviews) Sales Rank: 31092
Format: Explicit Lyrics Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 602517335707 UPC: 602517335707 EAN: 0602517335707 ASIN: B000PDZJ0I
Release Date: June 5, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|
| Tracks:
| | Jefe | | | En Sus Marcas Listos Fuera | | | Cambio | | | Fuera de Control | | | Impacto | | | Ella Me Levanto | | | A Lo Clasico | | | Bring It On | | | Who's Your Daddy? | | | El Celular | | | Ven Damelo | | | Papi Lover | | | Que Paso? | | | Mensaje de Estado | | | Tension | | | Soy lo Que Soy | | | Corazon Divina | | | Plane to PR | | | Me Quedaria | | | Todos Quieren a Raymond | | | Impacto |
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Album Description THE KING OF REGGAETON, DADDY YANKEE, returns with his new album "El Cartel: The Big Boss". After international platinum success with his first 4 albums, Daddy Yankee released, "El Barrio Fino", which went PLATINUM in the U.S alone, and solidified himself as the leading pioneer of the reggaeton movement. "El Cartel: The Big Boss" is the follow-up studio album everybody has been waiting 3 years for. Having enlisted super-producers such as will.i.am and Scott Storch, Daddy Yankee more than lives up to the hype and delivers his most multi-dimensional and complete album to date.
Amazon.com If the reggaeton revolution slowed for a second and you're not sure why, consider the comings and goings of Daddy Yankee: Three years have passed since he lit a Latino fire under the non-Latino world with "Gasolina," and despite the best efforts of vast clusters of tough-talking, body-rocking followers, only he, apparently, can keep it stoked. El Cartel: The Big Boss is a 21-track thrill ride destined to restore reggaeton's lost luster. The first few minutes creak--as intros go, "Jefe" is on the longwinded side--but from there it's a riot of bump-bumps, nemesis-bashing, and quick-tongued braggadocio. All credit to DY for again climbing atop a swirling mass of beats and remembering to swagger appealingly on the way up, but the small army of producers and friends who line up to pay the big boss respects on this disc also deserve their props: Fergie makes an impact on the Scott Storch-produced "Impacto" without forcing it in an overly mainstream direction, "Papi Lover" with Pussycat Doll Nicole Sherzinger busts out a cool bhangra-ragga vibe, and Will.i.am winds up "Plane to PR," a slight but contagious ode to Caribbean senoritas, tight. --Tammy La Gorce
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 16 more reviews...
  Very commercial and no "Barrio Fino-Feeling" February 2, 2008 This record sounds like an R-n-B or pop album. Songs like gasolina.... are missing totally. When Barrio Fino is too hard for you and you like Black eyed Pees and Jagged Edge this album is for you. People who love Barrio Fino, Los Homerun-es and hard reggaeton should be warned!!!! Even Tito El Bambinos Albums are tougher than this one!
  Thermo nuclear sound December 24, 2007 if you like heavy Bass coupled to a fantastic background melody then this CD is for you. There is hardly any filler material at all; pure USDA choice music. ENERGY is crammed into every groove....
  basura!!!!!!!!!!!!! no lo compres!!!!! December 6, 2007 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
definitivamente este disco es una basura despues de tanto tiempo sin lanzar una nueva produccion discografica Daddy Yankee nos trae este CD cual no es ni la mitad de lo ke se esperaba de el. el disco solo tiene 2 canciones buenas y son la de ella me levanto y la ke tiene con Akon mas nada el resto es mas de lo mismo y pensar ke con este disco ia a revolucionar el regeaton pues se le hundio el barco a su disco.
me da lastima de ke el como artista no pueda hacer algo bien buena musica como Barrio Fino y no piense solo en $$$ ahora despues de su One Hit Wonder.
mi recomendacion es no tires tu dinero a la basura mejor bajalo por internet de gratis o compralo en la calle pirateado ya ke no vale la pena gastar mas de 5 dolares por un disco ke tengas ke darle a skip a tantas canciones.
Mejor comprate el disco de Wisin & Yandel "Los Extraterrestres" este si es un disco bueno mucho material buena musica y mejores canciones aparte de ke este disco trae de todo y esta mejor.
  Puerto Rican August 26, 2007 Although I'm puerto rican reggaeton is not my first choice. But I have to admit, Daddy Yankee is expanding himself to success, boricua, be proud that hes working his way to the top and very proud of his roots, he talks about being boricua almost in every song, as also does speaking spanish. Just because hes making his way in the states it doesn't mean hes gone bad, hes giving his roots a reason to follow him and be proud. Great album, cool lyrics, awesome beats, totally worth the buy!!!!
  Good album, inconsistent in production values, a bit too long July 27, 2007 3 out of 5 found this review helpful
Best to review it, track by track.
Jefe - What is this, Hammer revisited? As an opener, it sucks. It is not a bad track, though.
En Sus Marcas - nice beat, difficult to understand at times; somehow this is Rompe, Revisited.
Cambio - clever use of rhyme and lyrics, slightly bachateao, so to speak.
Fuera de Control - identity crisis... would have taken the dembow away and leave as a straight hip-hop track.
Impacto - first installment, again, good beat, energetic; second one, less so.
Ella me levanto - a cliche from beginning to end, hate it. Would be loved by the average 15 yo. Sucks donkeys.
A lo Clasico - somehow reminds me of Calle 13's "Se Vale To-To". Has Voltio written all over it. Rompe The Third.
Bring it on - freshest track in the whole album... who cares if he's trying to pander to the English speaking audience?
Who's Your Daddy? - great, DY's voice is a bit buried in the mix. A bit too busy, but great.
El Celular - nice, would offend his die-hard fans, but great sounding, even if the lyrics are a bit clicheish.
Ven damelo - filler track, period. Gasolina sin plomo.
Papi Lover - as a crossover track beat-wise, nice effort.
Que paso? - as a crossover track, better effort than Papi Lover, but would tolerate the previous' subject matter better.
Mensaje de Estado - as far as tiraera goes, this is the best curse streak I've heard in a long, long time. W&Y, consider yourselves dissed. My concern is that tiraera is so old by now...
Tension - lyrically busy, good beat.
Soy lo que soy - autobiographical tracks, nicely written, but spare me the Popeye treatment... I Yam What I Yam, revisited.
Coraza divina - nice lyrics, awful beat. Proves that DY can get serious and not too saccharine while getting personal.
Plane to PR - great beat, really infectious... hate the idea of oversimplifying things and conveying a cliched image of Puerto Rico, a la Will Smith's 'Miami', but good dance track
Me quedaria - somehow reminds me of Vico C, ol skool. Good.
Todos quieren a Raymond - great subject matter, great lyrical images. Weird beat. I hate the title, he probably was watching "Everybody Loves Raymond" on his first class seat
Overall impression - DY is trying too hard to please too wide an audience, and his talent for lyrics is getting diluted. Should he be making an international impact on the same league as Ricky Martin, Raymond better remember that Ricky's last English album was a miserable stinker, because it was too busy and unfocused. This album is way too long. It consists of quite a few gems buried between a lot of filler. The braggadocio is starting to take its toll, but he's still the best lyrics delivery man in the business. When he's experimental, he's good; when his lyrics are focused, no one can touch him. Beat-wise, this album is inconsistent. Three stars.
|
|
| Powered by: Dknc, inc. and Amazon.com |  | 
For your safety and security, orders are processed through amazon.com
|
|
 |
|