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					 ![[Trill O.G.]](../coverart/bunb_trillOG.jpg)  
					Bun B :: Trill O.G.  
					Rap-A-Lot Records 
					Author: Steve 'Flash' Juon 
 
					 
					 
Bun B's legacy as a hip-hop Hall of Famer had already been cemented when 
he released his first solo CD "Trill" back in 
2005. As one half of U.G.K. the Port Arthur native had a decade+ of hip-hop 
classics under his belt, but his partner in rhyme Pimp C was doing a long stint 
behind bars. While some worried at the time that the dopeness of Bun's solo 
was the beginning of the end for the group, they promptly reunited once he 
was released from incarceration and returned at an all-time career high in 2007 
with "Underground Kingz." 
A few short months later Pimp C was dead. To say this turn of events was 
perplexing is to say the least an understatement. The Kingz gave their fans 
what they had been waiting for so long while Pimp C was gone, and just like 
that he was gone again - only this time for good. The real fucked up twist to 
all of this was that Bun had already proved he could ride solo and succeed 
before his friend and confidant left this Earth. Would he even want to do it again? 
Hip-Hop got lucky. Bun was able to ride out his pain and come back even 
stronger on "II Trill," assuring that both 
his legacy and U.G.K.'s would continue to ride on through the decade and beyond.
It's 2010 now and Bun B is back for a third go around on "Trill O.G." sounding 
as confident as ever. On the Steve Below produced opener "Chuuch!" the crooners 
on his hook sum up the situation this way: "I came to tell the truth, the whole truth 
and nothin but the truth/I came to represent for the South in the streets and in the 
booth." And represent he does:
 
"We back baby, and better than we ever was 
It's U.G.K. so quit actin like we never was 
You see the crew is II Trill, and in effect 
And Rap-A-Lot is rollin with us, we fin' to wreck 
So ask Em, ask Hova, ask Diddy 
Go ask Yeezy, Jeezy.. ask Fitty 
And they'll tell you I'm throwed when I spit it 
And still in here doin it, you can't fuck with it 
And I'ma hit in the chest with the nina 
Reppin H-Town like James Prince Sr. 
Am I hard enough? Am I real enough? Am I ready? 
Bro well you already know; on your mark, set, ready go!"
 
Fittingly this is just a warm up - "Trill O.G." keeps getting hotter from this point 
forward. Justice L.E.A.G.U.E. lays down a smooth pop backdrop for a collabo' 
between Bun B and T-Pain on "Trillionaire," an instrumental eerily reminiscent 
of Polow Da Don's "Hero" for Nas.
 
Bun B: "I'm tryin to take this to the mountain top, Appalachian ('lachian) 
But it's a rocky road (road) and I'm still movin up 
And ain't no movin us, so keep it pushin, get to movin bro (for real) 
You might be new to me but you know I ain't new to ya 
Go ask the white boys, they say he's totally tubular (dude) 
Fuckin bad bitches, rub my dick against their uvula 
Everytime I hit the streets, it's like a fuckin movie bro (damn) 
You know what I do to ya, send gladiators through to ya 
They gon' leave ya chopped up, like they was DJ Screwin ya, hold up"
 
T-Pain: "Yeah, I know they hatin on me (on me), cause I'm the man ('cause I'm the man) 
I'm too trill homie (trill homie), I don't give a damn (I don't give a damn) 
I'm a self made (self made), trillionaire (trillionaire) 
I'm a self made (self made), trillionaire (trillionaire)"
 
If hip-hop's most trill artist wants to declare himself a trillionaire, I say go ahead. 
What some might miss is that he's not using this mythical status (there are no single 
individuals alive today worth a trillion dollars) to flaunt excess wealth. Bun would 
be just as trill as a thousandaire, because for him it's all about a state of mind where 
he achieves his goals regardless of his bank account. Guest rappers like Young Jeezy 
on "Just Like That" spent far more time bragging about what their money buys than 
Bun, although he will occasionally floss for the sake of a punchline: "Now when it 
come to makin money I'm a printin press/and when it come to bein trill I'm the litmus 
test; run it like a fitness test." Bun has always taken being a badass in rap to a higher 
level, wanting to impress listeners with the strength of his wordplay first and the size 
of his bank account second. The DJ Premier produced "Let 'Em Know" epitomizes 
this philosophy perfectly, a Texas reunion that needs to be done again and again, 
one that opens with a shoutout to Guru and a vow this was a "long time comin' baby":
 
"Okay, Bun is on the mic, Premier's on the track 
The South is in the house, now what can fuck wit that? 
And what can fuck wit this? I take shots and don't fuckin miss 
First on your baby mama bucket list 
You on some sucka shit, might as well suck a dick 
'Cause you bein a bitch just for the fuck of it 
And when I fuckin spit, niggaz get to tuckin shit 
Tryna duck down wherever they can fuckin get 
They better ask somebody 
'fore I have Big Truck pass the shotty and blast somebody, bitch! 
Mastered the flow, the gun and the hand game 
Now I'm resurrectin a REAL nigga campaign! 
Fake ass niggaz, we snatch 'em out the damn rain 
Take they damn chain, hit 'em with the damn thang 
BANG! Now that's what happen when the trigger blow 
Aiyyo Premier, let a motherfuckin nigga know!"
 
If you don't love this song, just retire from hip-hop right now and go fuck with some 
Pat Boone records. Seriously. There's much more to love on this densely packed 20 
track album, although I'm given to understand some versions come with less - around 
16 in fact. So let's rule out the bonus tracks or iTunes deluxe edition tracks and say 
this - you may not fuck with a better album the entire month of August. I'm sure there 
will be some good releases at some point, but it's awfully hard to name a bad track on 
"Trill O.G." anywhere. The collaboration of Bun, Pimp C, Trey Songz and TUPAC 
SHAKUR on "Right Now" is EPIC. I normally can't stand Gucci Mane 
on tracks, but Bun B even makes him tolerable on the pounding B-Do beats of 
"Countin' Money All Day." There are much better guests though - Drake flosses on 
the almost six minute long Boy-1da song "It's Been a Pleasure," Twista takes things 
to a triple time flow from Chicago on "Speakeasy," and Slim Thug lives up to the title 
of "Ridin' Slow" when he gets down with Bun and Play-N-Skillz, a track that vows 
to "shake the sidewalk" and should succeed in that aim and claim. I make no apology 
for being a long time Bun B fan, but if this is your first time getting down with the 
man then "Trill O.G." will undoubtedly make you a convert too. R.I.P. Chad Butler.
 
Music Vibes: 8.5 of 10
Lyric Vibes: 8.5 of 10
TOTAL Vibes: 8.5 of 10
 
Originally posted: August 10, 2010 
source: www.RapReviews.com
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