The song " Change Up" is featuring Jay-Z and Beanie Sigel, and it starts with Sigel on the first verse on a hard instrumental, then the instrumental switches when Memphis Bleek starts to lay down his verse and the beat switches again when it comes to Jay-Z who decided to tease his verse for the following song " My Mind Right" remix. This is another crazy and high instrumental which also has that 2000s club and beach vibe and Memphis Bleek's flow matched nicely with the beat. Then we have the song " We Get Low" produced by Just Blaze and engineered by Young Guru. The song alongside with Styles P "I Get High" deserves to be in the top 5 hip-hop songs to listen to when you blaze one up. He raps about what he does when he smokes to get high, and he also mentioned in the song that he smokes one for BIG and one for Pac. " I Get High" is, well you can guess it by the name of the song that Bleek loves to get high. There's also a video of this single with cameos from a tennis beginner now legend Serena Williams, WNBA's Lisa Leslie and a young Megan Good. The song has that 2000s club vibe and it explains how the Roc boys love to have fun. The following song is " Do My." featuring Jay-Z. The album starts with a banging instrumental from Just Blaze on the song called " U Know Bleek", where Memphis Bleek reminds everybody who he is and what he's all about. The reason for this throwback review on Memphis Bleek is to not forget who were Jay-Z's soldiers before the Kanye West and Beyonce days. The album features Jay-Z, Beanie Sigel, Amil, H Money Bags, Carl Thomas, Twista, and Missy Elliot. Memphis Bleek was such a hot and fire artist on the roster of the Roc-A-Fella Family, he released his second album "The Understanding" on December 5th, 2000 under Roc-A-Fella Records, Def Jam Recordings and Bleek's label at the time, Get Low Records. Carter" and "The Dynasty: Roc La Familia". After the release of that album, Bleek teamed up with Beanie Sigel to assist Jay-Z's "Vol 3. Hard Knock Life", he released his first solo album " Coming of Age" in 1998 which sold enough units to be certified Gold. Bleek made a name for himself after appearing in Jay-Z's third album "Vol 2. Memphis Bleek who grew up in the same apartment building as Jay-Z in the Marcy projects in Brooklyn. Hero will fight him in the second half of story mode.For those of you who remember Jay-Z's protege since Reasonable Doubt, Memphis Bleek, he was the second coming of the Roc-A-Fella crew at the time. Memphis Bleek works for D-Mob as a Club Boss at the Limit, but you'll probably see him elsewhere around town as well. Watch as he brings the fight to you in Def Jam Fight For NY. continues with "Round Here," a dirty, down-south piece of funk featuring Trick Daddy ("I know you scared now!") that expands the aesthetic of the album right toward "We Ballin'," a joint with the kind of addictive Indian/Bangra beat that makes it hard not to sing along: "School a little youth off the game / I was young just like ‘em / Jay taught me the same," Bleek rhymes before the jam's breath-heavy hook pays homage to the harmonies of the west side. , Bleek is back and ready to take his career to the next level with what is easily the most diverse, most personal, and strongest album of his already accomplished career. The success of two certified gold albums, 1999's Coming Of Age and 2000's The Understanding. At 25, Memphis Bleek, the first artist ever signed to the ROC label and long known as Jay-Z's hand-picked prodigy, has already seen After a three-year hiatus from the rap scene, Roc-A-Fella's golden boy has truly come of age.