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The Red Light District
Users Say
194 ratings
Album Reviews: 8
Album: The Red Light District
Artist: Ludacris
Release Date: 12/9/2004
Genre: Hip-Hop
Tags: hip-hop, rap, 2004, hip hop, gangsta rap, ludacris, southern rap, red light district, club rap, party rap, country rap, dirty south hardcore rap

Ludacris' never-ending run of guest verses rolled on through 2004 (for better or worse), as did the hit singles from 2003's Chicken -n- Beer. He still managed to find the time to come out with The Red Light District, an album with content that rarely reflects the illicit-sounding title. There's... [+] Expand

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The Red Light District by Ludacris!

Recent User Reviews

Same old, Same old....
FULL REVIEW
posted May 7, 2005
Luda gone bad
FULL REVIEW
posted Jun 5, 2005
Ludacris
FULL REVIEW
posted Jan 12, 2005
mad words
FULL REVIEW
posted Jun 2, 2005
Ludacris - "The Red Light District"
[CLICK FULL REVIEW FOR MORE INFO]
FULL REVIEW
posted May 15, 2007
what happen !?
FULL REVIEW
posted Aug 8, 2005
Another good one by Luda.
FULL REVIEW
posted Nov 21, 2005
Ludacris is doing very good in his rapping career. he has done great and amusing videos. he is definately going to the top
FULL REVIEW
posted Mar 7, 2006

Critic's Review

3.0 out of 5 stars Andy Kellman, All Music Guide
Ludacris' never-ending run of guest verses rolled on through 2004 (for better or worse), as did the hit singles from 2003's Chicken -n- Beer. He still managed to find the time to come out with The Red Light District, an album with content that rarely reflects the illicit-sounding title. There's nothing as squalid as "Splash Waterfalls," for instance -- the low point of the MC's career, regardless of chart success -- and yet, at the same time, there's nothing as immense as "Stand Up," and there isn't anything quite as ferocious as "Southern Fried Intro/Blow It Out." Bragging, boasting, clowning around, getting high, dispersing words of wisdom -- these are the overriding themes. Ludacris is more relaxed than ever, his mix of off-the-wall wisecracks and lofty proclamations established immediately after the intro. No other MC could rattle off a stream of Austin Powers riffs without sounding corny, which he duly proves over Green Lantern's apt spin-cycle treatment of Quincy Jones' "Soul Bossa Nova": "Causin' lyrical disasters, it's the master/Make music for Mini-Mes, models, and Fat Bastards/These women trying to get me out my Pelle Pelles/They strip off my clothes and tell me, 'Get in my belly!'/Stay on the track, hit the ground running like Flo Jo/Sit back in time and never lost my mojo." Luda hasn't slipped into the complacent lap of luxury as deeply as some of his fellow platinum contemporaries, but it's evident that he's not as hungry as he once was. A handful of top-level productions help make up for this, such as the Medicine Men's sufficiently rowdy work on "Get Back," Timbaland's tribal/safari-like backdrop on "The Potion" (one of his most radical productions since Ms. Jade's "Big Head," with owl hoots and wild-bird caws in place of synth notes and percussion accents), and L.T. Moe's squirting/jingling loose-booty funk on "Spur of the Moment" (which could be mistaken for a DJ Quik track, especially since he MCs on it).
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