Tha Carter III
|
| List Price: | $13.98 |
| Price: | $12.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
48 new or used available from $5.04
Average customer review:Track Listing
- 3 Peat - Lil Wayne
- Mr. Carter - Jay-Z, Lil Wayne
- Milli - Lil Wayne
- Got Money - Lil Wayne, T-Pain,
- Comfortable - Babyface, Lil Wayne
- Dr. Carter - Lil Wayne
- Phone Home - Lil Wayne
- Tie My Hands - Lil Wayne, Robin Thicke
- Mrs. Officer [*] - Kidd Kidd, Lil Wayne, Bobby Valentino
- Let the Beat Build [*] - Lil Wayne
- Shoot Me Down - Lil Wayne, D. Smith
- Lollipop - Lil Wayne, Static Major
- La - Brisco, Busta Rhymes, Lil Wayne
- Pussy Monster [*] - Lil Wayne
- You Ain't Got Nuthin - Fabolous, Lil Wayne, Juelz Santana
- Dontgetit - Lil Wayne
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1015 in Music
- Released on: 2008-08-18
- Number of discs: 1
- Format: Explicit Lyrics
- Dimensions: .20 pounds
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
Tha Carter III is the sixth studio album by rapper Lil Wayne and it is the final album in Tha Carter trilogy. Originally known as the youngest Hot Boy, Lil' Wayne has orchestrated a steady stream of hits. The New Orleans rapper began his long career with Cash Money as part of the Hot Boys, a popular late-'90s supergroup consisting of Juvenile, Turk, and B.G.
Amazon.com
Lil Wayne put out enough material in 2007 to inspire a Vibe magazine list of the 77 best Lil Wayne songs of that year alone. That level of output is the primary reason behind Tha Carter III's bumpy ride. The albums opens well with the appropriately boastful "3 Peat," followed by the symbolic torch-passing of "Mr. Carter," featuring Jay-Z. But nothing matches or exceeds that until the Swizz Beatz-produced lark "Dr. Carter" and the album's arguable high point "Phone Home." Framed by simple, bombastic beats from Cool & Dre, Lil Wayne argues in "Phone Home" that he's so far beyond the competition he's extra-terrestrial. Within that track comes a stellar example of how Weezy's reptilian flow can let an inspired aside such as "I'm rare, like Mr. Clean with hair" slip by almost unnoticed. But no artist this prolific can avoid dropping some duds amongst the winners. The disc's three monster hits sound silly ("Lollipop"), annoying ("A Milli"), and generally uninspired ("Got Money") when stacked up against the non-hits. David Banner's musical backing for "La La" provides the kind of brain-tickling inventiveness that Lil Wayne should always have in order to push his gift for verbal absurdity to greater heights. --Kris Kendall
Customer Reviews
The carter
From being in a rap band to being one of the best male rappers alife today lil wayne as done it all. Creating two top albums that The album is call the carter 3. But the question being ask is the carter 3 hot as like lil wayne last two albums? well the word out is that lil wayne is the best rapper alife and is album the carter 3 is one of the top albums to get if you are looking for hot beats, nice tempo and some sweet lyrics. The carter 3 is is also useful as an exceantion point. the album is useful for people who life poetry. By the time you hear this album you could say to your self wayne is one of the best poet today.By listening to the carter 3 you could tell wayne has taken the task of album making seriously. so if you are a person who cares about is music and love to go shipping for a new album you should defenetly check out the carter 3 or as some say c3.
Reveiw: By Akpona precious
Garbage
Lil wayne uses autotune on his voice to delve into the mainstream. His lyrics are whack and his flow is slow and clumsy. His songs degrade women and he has no substance in his music. I think he's garbage. Then again I listen to really great rap like Public Enemy and Canibus. I shouldn't even review this worthless piece of plastic and aluminum but I wanted to put my two cents in and tell you suckas whats up.
Fun, stupid
The thing about Tha Carter 3 is that its more like a big party, with Wayne (unfortunately) hosting. So you get some killer beats, good hooks and great guest apperances. but you have to put up with Lil' Wayne, who is one of the silliest spazzes on a mic. Is it fun? Very. I can see why its a chart topper. But its more like a good mix CD than a coherent album spearheaded by the artist.





