This is Michael Mixerr. Tonight I am going to review the Caution album by L-Dog from San Antonio, Texas. This album was released on CD by Do-Moe Records in 2008. L-Dog returns to us with a new album called Caution. Caution was extremely underground, not well known, and highly overlooked as all the other albums in L-Dog’s discography was. DONRON210 and L-Dog do handle most of the production. L-Dog takes credit for everything else.
L-Dog tells us to take caution on Caution. Take no heed. L-Dog is back with another hot album for the streets for the pimps, playas, and hustlers. He tells bitches, haters, and motherfuckers to take caution when they are approaching him in life. L-Dog still be on a mission while them haters still dissing. Caution is very dark, ghetto, and grimey as Street Therapy was.
Street Therapy Revisited is the successor track to Street Therapy from the album Street Therapy.
Street Therapy is gritty grimy ghetto hardcore Down South that the rap game has been missing in! Street Therapy is about street knowledge. You gotta be streetwise while living on these streets. Haters will be still dissing you and dragging your name through the mud in these streets. People are shady in the streets. You’ve got haters, killers, and police to watch out for.
L-Dog gets his hustle on Hustle. I Still is about the return of L-Dog. L-Dog returns to us with a new hot track called I Still. L-Dog still loves the hustle but he still hates to struggle so he still be on a mission while them haters still are dissing because he’s so dope. Too dope for the radio!
Caution is very dark, ghetto, and grimey as Street Therapy was. Caution has the same themes and elements that the Street Therapy did in 2007. He tells bitches, haters, and motherfuckers to take caution and take no heed while you are listening to this album. L-Dog compares himself to the likes of Tupac and Biggie.
While the quantity for number of copies pressed for this album were extremely limited, L-Dog gave the people what they were waiting for. Dirty south rap over tight robotic techno beats about hard times and being down for the struggle. He made you ya’ll get up out ya’ll seat while he made ya do what it do. His dope be on the mic and in the store. Not in the kitchen. There are not many rappers that can rap about being down for the struggle that have tight beats and lyrics that don’t automatically suck these days.
I rate this album, Caution, 4/5****!
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