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Brass Knuckles
Brass Knuckles

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Artist: Nelly
Label: Universal
Category: Music

List Price: $13.98
Buy New: $5.93
You Save: $8.05 (58%)



New (56) Used (26) from $2.59

Avg. Customer Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars 17 reviews
Sales Rank: 30368

Format: Explicit Lyrics
Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.4

MPN: 001015002
UPC: 602517492554
EAN: 0602517492554
ASIN: B000UMM722

Release Date: September 16, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  • U Ain't Him feat. Rick Ross
  • Hold Up feat. LL Cool J and T.I.
  • LA feat. Snoop and Nate Dog
  • Long Night feat. Usher
  • Lie feat. St. Lunatics
  • Party People feat.Fergie
  • Self-Esteem feat. Chuck D
  • Body On Me feat. Akon and Ashanti
  • Stepped On My J'z feat. Ciara and JD
  • Let It Go Lil Momma feat. Pharrell One and Only
  • One And Only
  • Who F**ks w/ Me feat. Avery Storm
  • UCUD GEDIT feat. Gucci Mane and R. Kelly

Similar Items:

  • Year of the Gentleman
  • Paper Trail
  • The Recession
  • Exit 13
  • LAX

Editorial Reviews:

Album Description
Grammy award-winning artist Nelly breaks four years of silence with straight hand-to-mic combat on his fifth studio album Brass Knuckles.

The St. Louis rapper has sold 30 million albums to date -- and he's approaching his upcoming release with renewed intensity. "When you're the champion you have to psyche yourself into thinking you're the underdog, even if people don't see you as that," Nelly confesses. "Nobody going to give you anything, you got to work hard for what you want. You got to continue to press."

Nelly makes his statement in the form of brass-tacks vocal tracks, dance floor anthems and suggestive, seductive slow jams. A master at dynamic collaborations, he's assembled a cast of all-stars to collaborate including Usher, Pharrell, Akon, Ciara, Chuck D, Snoop Dogg, Jermaine Dupri, Ashanti, Avery Storm and the St. Lunatics. "When you hear the energy change, or the tempo switches to a nice flow, it means something," he says. Nelly shows his versatility spitting rhymes with deep, percussive flow, and then switching it up to sing over soulful hooks.

Party People: The first single, "Party People," pairs him with Fergie. It's a raucous attention getter, laying the foundation for what's to come - the party is in full swing. "People wonder why I keep the clubs jamming. You can't make a club song if you don't go to the clubs. People always think I'm going out partying, but what I'm doing is seeing what the DJ is spinning. I want to hear and see what's the next thing."

Let It Go: Nelly gets dirty, Derrty style, with Pharrell on vocals over the Neptunes' crackly beats.

Self Esteem: The vibe changes with "Self Esteem," a fluid, inspirational track featuring Chuck D about staying true in the face of struggle, such as a soldier serving in an unjust war. "There are so many obstacles in life to overcome and as soon as you jump over one, there come another one. But we got to be strong and stay strong."

"My all time favorite collaboration is with Chuck D. I heard the track and did the song and I felt something was missing." Public Enemy's "Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos" ran through his head. "Before Chuck even heard the song, he was like, I'll do it. That felt so good to me, that he trusted me. He knew that I wouldn't bring him no mess. That's Public Enemy, that's our CNN of hip hop."

Long Night: Nelly smoothes it out with Usher on "Long Night" -- an intricate musical cut, stacked with thick harmonies. "Sometimes you do songs with R &B artists and you do your verse, and they sing the hook but this one wasn't like that. This one, we're into the song."

Stepped on My J'z: The signature Nelly song featuring Jermaine Dupri and Ciara pays ode to the classic Jordan sneakers. "Shoes are a part of the hip-hop culture. I love my J's. I grew up in that era. I'm part of the reason why Jordan's don't come out on the weekday no more. I used to cut school to get a pair of the new joints"

The time away from the spotlight has been wrought with life lessons for Nelly, balancing the personal and the public, with the loss of his sister Jackie in 2005 after a long struggle with leukemia. "That's the biggest thing to ever happen in my life. That was my heart. Everybody deals with pain differently. I am not one that's going to sit in the room and sulk. No one can harm me worse than I can harm myself. It put me in a different place, but it put me in a better place. I see what is now. It's really simple. It's your family. It's your kids. It's the charitable work that you do. It's keeping it real with yourself."

While some would've thrown in the towel, Nelly never strayed far from the studio and he continued to grow his business ventures -- the Apple Bottom brand, Skybox a new St. Louis Sports Bar and part ownership of the Charlotte Bobcats -- and philanthropic work through his charities 4 Sho 4 Kids and Jes Us 4 Jackie.

Nelly is a man about his business. An award-winning artist who's up for the challenge, primed for battle .....here we go, round five with Brass Knuckles - ding ding.

Album Description
Japanese pressing of the 2008 release from the Hip Hop superstar features two bonus tracks: 'Bay' and 'Wadsynaname'. Production includes some of the hottest producers on the scene today: Polow Da Don, Pharrell and JD to name a few. In the summer of 2000, Nelly, an unknown rapper from St. Louis, Missouri, sold of a quarter of a million copies of his debut album, Country Grammar during its first week of release. Two years later, in the summer of 2002, Nelly proved to be no one-hit wonder when his sophomore album Nellyville came in at the number one position on Billboard's Top 200 chart. In 2003, he released a platinum-selling remix album, Da Derrty Versions (The Reinvention). Cumulatively, Nelly has sold close to 30 million singles/albums worldwide establishing him as on of the top-selling artists of our time. Currently there are two hit singles at radio: 'Step On My J'z' (featuring JD and Ciara) and 'Body On Me (featuring Ashanti and Akon. Universal.


Customer Reviews:   Read 12 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars I Used To Like Nelly   September 17, 2008
 10 out of 12 found this review helpful


Nelly and producer Jason Epperson made miracles in 2000 when they with a very restrained budget managed to make "Country Grammar" one of the most sold albums of the year with hits like the title track, peaking at #7 "Ride With Me" #3 and "E.I" #15. Nelly combines alot of Dirty South elements with swagger, by singing the infectious hooks and rapping with a very unique flow that perfectly matched the sound, thus being a pioneer for populizing Southern Hip Hop aswell as making it commercial enough for the charts, something that was rare for Southern Hip Hop at this point, aswell as Rap songs becoming top #10 hits hits in general. Although "Country Grammar" wasn't an exellent album by any means it ultimately sold 15 million copies. Nelly's success was a fact. Nelly's next album "Nellyville" almost sold as much and while it continued where his first album left off, it also expanded his boundary by a couple of massive hits, in particular The Neptunes produced "Hot in Herre" that spent 7 weeks at #1 on the Billboard charts only to be suceeded by of his own Hip Hop ballad "Dilemma" with Kelly Rowland, a cleaver remake of Patti Labelle's 1983 hit "Love, Need and Want You". It would spend another 7 weeks as #1 aswell as the #3 hit "Air Force Ones" about Nike Shoes. In 2004 Nelly decided to release two albums simultaneously, the club friendly "Sweat" and the more laid back "Suit". A few hits come up, like #4 "My Place" with Jaheim, #3 "Over and Over" with Tim McGraw and then the #1 hit "Grillz With Paul Wall, populizing tooth jewelry for the first time in a big hit, he had also previosuly had a big hit with "Shake Ya Tailfeather" peaking at #1 with Diddy and Murphy Lee for the Soundtrack of Bad Boys 2. At this time Nelly became the wealthies rapper in Hip Hop and by all those big time collaborations he had on Sweet/Suit it was apparent that he had changed from the charming southerner who sang his own hooks and still made it so well to a wealthy young man who was more interersted in having hits then earning them.

After a few years Nelly is back with a new album called "Brass Knuckles" his first in 4 years, with a title like that can we expect a tougher Nelly now?. But alot of things have changed. Hip Hop is diffrent with all those futuristic beats that is setting the trends, Jay-Z has surpassed Nelly as the richest man in Hip Hop and plenty of other southern rappers like T.I, Ludacris and Lil Wayne are up for the competition. So what is there to expect from this new album? Nelly promised more hot collaborations here, especially from Bruce Springsteen and Mariah Carey but after a closer look at the album none of them are being found, but another 19 member guest list for it's 14 tracks though. The first three singles all bombed on the charts and they're infact all terrible. Polow Da Don's attempt at making a party song with Fergie aptly titled "Party People" was so bad that I was embarrased caught listening to it. Akon's "Body On Me" sounds like the anthem to an X-rated flick, not a duet between him and girlfriend Ashanti, although the trademark hook from Akon was quite meliodic and then "Stepped On My J's" is just repetitive wih lazy production, Dupri do his best to ruin the song with his guest appearence as always. The ridicolous "Wadsyaname" that stole Kci And Jojo's "All My Life" didn't even make the final cut, which is a positive thing afterall. But if these songs are the singles choises what can we expect from the rest of the album?.


The repetitive Neptunes produced "Let It Go Mama" could've been a highlight but the forced hook ain't no southern sing-a-long thing and it ends up being annoying. The Polow Da Don produced "Lie" a song about relationship problems got the beat and the hook but the lyrics are so bad it's funny. Two more Polow songs are "One And Only" a decent love song and only song without guests and "Uced Gedit" which is the opposite with naughty lyrics from R. Kelly and Gucci Mane. On the bragadocio anthem "Hold Up" with LL Cool J and T.I, Nelly claims that his only goal is to be "young, black and rich" and that others want to be him, more like "Old, Tired and Unmotivated", the same goes for "U Ain't Him" with ex Prison guard err I mean Hustler Rick Ross. A tribute to the west coast called "LA" with Snoop Dogg (who else!) with a typical west coast beat is just weird. Isn't Nelly from St.Louis, why is he trying to please everyone?. "Long Night" with Usher is a seductive song for the ladies while "Chill" is a song about not messing with him, sounds like something that 50 Cent would come up with lyrically and by beats. "Who F Wit Me" got interesting spanish guitar riffs but the lyrics are more bragadocio. The absolute standout is "Self Esteem" With Chuck D and it's about archiving your goals against all odds. It's deep and personal, why not more like this?

Overall, 1-2 songs that are good doesn't save this album form being a fiasco. Nelly has completely abandoned the cathcy sing a long songs that makes him a star back in the early decade and he's trying way hard to apply to current trends and to please diffrent groups. There's also a little too much bragadocio here, something he should save for 50 Cent or Young Jeezy. But the biggest and most aparent problem is that the songs are simply not memorable enough. That's why Nelly brought in so many guests to fill the gap. And it seems like Nelly is hardly trying either. Maybe he's content with his current life and just see rapping as a hobby. You mustn't buy this. 1'5 stars.




2 out of 5 stars A Miss on Nelly's Part   September 27, 2008
 6 out of 7 found this review helpful

After the great SUIT, Nelly was truly on top of his game. As poppish as that album was, it was strong. Who would've thought that Nelly would ever fall out of the limelight or that his pop-rap excursions would fall flat. Both of those terrible things happen on BRASS KNUCKLES. After a 4 year hiatus, you would expect that Nelly would be ready to comeback with a star-studded 4-star affair, much like SUIT was 4 years ago (Sweatsuit was issued in 2005 combining SUIT/SWEAT). BRASS KNUCKLES, much like Jay-Z's KINGDOM COME comeback falls short. The difference between those two is that KINGDOM COME was at least enjoyable. BRASS KNUCKLES just plain feels second-rate. Even the standout tracks aren't nearly as potent as Nelly's past triumphs - "Body On Me" featuring Akon and Ashanti feels stale, even though it is on of BRASS KNUCKLES standout's. "Party People" is fun enough, but its overall stupidity catches up quickly. I mean, Fergie rapping was so 2006. Evidently, Nelly rapping was so 2004, since he sounds so uninspired on BRASS KNUCKLES.

The album opens mediocrely with "U Ain't Him" featuring the ubiquitous Rick Ross. It's nothing to write home about for sure. The T.I./LL Cool J featuring "Hold Up" is at least fun, and the beat is sick, but still, it doesn't truly captivate the listener. "La" features an uninspiring Snoop Dogg, which does nothing for the momentum of the album. Usher shines on "Long Night", unfortunately, the track is forgettable. "Lie" featuring the St. Lunatics is average as well and ultimately forgettable. "Party People" featuring Fergie has only so much sustaining power before a couple of listens makes it sound as uninspired as everything else. "Self-Esteem" featuring Chuck D is a clear-cut miss and perhaps one of the corniest Nelly tracks - EVER. "Body On Me", a rather underrated single restores some momentum, and a couple of great proceeding tracks via "Stepped on My J'z" (featuring JD & Ciara) and "Let It Go Lil' Mama" (featuring Pharrell) finally bring some muscularity to a rather tepid album. From there, BRASS KNUCKLES falls on its arse with a couple of forgettable uninspired numbers ("One and Only", "Chill", "Who F***s Wit Me", and "Ucud Gedit").

It's unfortunate for Nelly BRASS KNUCKLES turned out so tepid. I don't recommend this album, particularly with many better hip-hop albums (Lil Wayne, Young Jeezy, The Game...) 2 stars is generous.



1 out of 5 stars When will it end   September 21, 2008
 5 out of 7 found this review helpful

Nelly drops his latest release and just like the other albums it is wack. Really elementary lyrics and some decent club beats is what Nelly has been known for. Yeah some of the beats are tight on this album but I don't give Nelly credit for it because that just means he had the money to pay for them. The lyrics that he lays on top of the beat are really really weak commercial fluff. On this album I didn't like the guest appearances especially chuck d's. The song they are on due to two totally different styles sounded terrible. Almost like mixing vodka and milk it just doesn't mix well. I had to laugh about the STEPPING ON MY J'Z song. On one of his past songs he was bragging about how many pairs he had, on this one he is mad if you step on them. LOL. Lately I have been giving Nelly a little credit because he has been trying to do songs with Old school greats like KRS, LL, and Chuck D. But these attempts are not making him better lyrically. To get to the point about Brass knuckles is another commercial, wack coaster for your coffee table. I felt like I ate a soggy peanut butter and jelly sandwich after I listened to it. Save your money.


1 out of 5 stars Garbage on its lowesr level   September 21, 2008
 5 out of 7 found this review helpful

Straight up trash, Nelly has gone to an all time low with this one, OH MY GOD, Are u kidding me??!? How the hell did thid even pass through the label. A huge dissappointment. Dont waste your money, if u got to have this, just go to Limewire and bootlegg it.


1 out of 5 stars Waste Of Money   September 27, 2008
 5 out of 6 found this review helpful

Do not spend your monry on this listen to something with thought behind it. You will not be happy if you buy this.

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