

His prominence has come hard and fast (and not without a fair share of controversy), but in truth, he has been active in the underground since the mid-'90s. Boyz N da Hood hit the Top Five the week it was released, and Young Jeezy - the group's most visible member - wound up releasing Let's Get It: Thug Motivation 101 only a month later. We're a small part of the greater whole, but a piece of the greater whole is in every one of us, completely.A sequence of events juggled the release dates for Boyz N da Hood's first album (issued on Bad Boy) and Young Jeezy's own widely distributed breakout (issued on Def Jam).

#9 visit and share a smile with your neighbor! #PPA 5 years ago “When you look at the dark side, careful you must be. RT norm: Who you know fresher than Hov? Riddle me that. Go Erin! (Say something 3 times and you mean it) /thats-out-ther… 5 years ago RT sean_branagan: Go ErinTheMiller Go Erin. RT NgatiaEsq: PPA: Rebranding Africa by Curating the Continent’s Positive Developments /blog/ppa-rebra… via PositivePress_ 5 years ago RT ApexSteelLtd: Apex Steel was the 1st company in East Africa to make Poly Propylene Random (PPR) and High Density Polyethylene (HDPE) pi… 4 years ago

The length of the album is about seventy five minutes and is saturated with Jeezy’s slow raspy rapping, which is littered with “Yeaaaah” or an “Ayeeee!” and even a “Thaaats Riiight” accompanying his flow. ATL was carried by Outkast and Ludacris throughout the 90′s and early 2000′s and then by T.I., with Jeezy’s TM 101 release he helped carve his name out as one of the premier Atlanta/southern rap artists during the decade. Thoughts: Originally a part of the group Boyz N da Hood’, Jay Wayne Jenkins or Young Jeezy aka Snowman, the most visible member of the group dropped his first major label solo album that helped southern rap and Atlanta strengthen it’s niche in the rap game.
