Greatest Hits (Screwed)
Download links and information about Greatest Hits (Screwed) by The Geto Boys. This album was released in 2002 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap genres. It contains 15 tracks with total duration of 01:17:55 minutes.
Artist: | The Geto Boys |
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Release date: | 2002 |
Genre: | Hip Hop/R&B, Rap |
Tracks: | 15 |
Duration: | 01:17:55 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | Balls & My Word | 4:28 |
2. | Scarface | 5:47 |
3. | Mind Playin' Tricks | 6:07 |
4. | Damn It Feels Good to Be a Gangsta | 5:53 |
5. | Crooked Officer | 4:19 |
6. | Mind of a Lunatic | 6:29 |
7. | Straight Gangstaism | 5:43 |
8. | It Ain't Sh*t | 4:33 |
9. | Geto Fantasy | 4:48 |
10. | Geto Boys and Girls | 6:12 |
11. | The World Is a Geto | 4:11 |
12. | Gangsta (Put Me Down) | 3:55 |
13. | Let a Hoe Be a Hoe | 4:05 |
14. | The Answer to Baby (Mary II) | 5:05 |
15. | Six Feet Deep | 6:20 |
Details
[Edit]This is a second and more inclusive package of the Geto Boys' best moments. The first, Uncut Dope, covered the group through 1991's We Can't Be Stopped; this opens it up to include tracks from 1993's Till Death Do Us Part, 1996's Resurrection, and 1998's Da Good Da Bad & da Ugly. Those three albums were more patchy than the ones that came before them — with the exception of Making Trouble — and none of the highlights from them are the caliber of earlier tracks like "Mind of a Lunatic," "My Mind Playing Tricks on Me," and "Trigga Happy N***a." So, going strictly by pound-for-pound quality, Uncut Dope is the better of the two, but it's not as if later tracks like "Six Feet Deep," "The World Is a Geto," and "Gangsta (Put Me Down)" are entirely undeserving of anthology status. Furthermore, this disc has five more tracks and has better sound quality — naturally so since it was released ten years after Uncut Dope. Choosing where to go first with this group is a tough call: The Geto Boys is the group's best album, but going with that leaves one without some of the group's best material. And neither Uncut Dope nor Greatest Hits are clear-cut first stops. Regardless of the choice, some of the most brutally descriptive and alternately funny Southern hip-hop is in well-stocked supply. [Some copies came with a bonus DVD.]