Seen It All: The Autobiography
Jeezy's first album in three years is intermittently enjoyable, even if it completely cuts against the presumed goal of presenting Jeezy as an elder statesman of the South along the lines of Bun B or Scarface. However, Jeezy's recent legal troubles add a strange weight to what Seen It All could have been: had it been autobiographical, it may have been even more inherently sad than it already is.
Why does Jeezy sound so energized on Seen It All? At this point in a rapper’s career a new record is supposed to be almost an afterthought, a brief bit of face time with the CEO when he’s in the office instead of on his yacht. But there’s Jeezy, bobbing and weaving through a rhyme scheme for two minutes straight on…
Check out our album review of Artist's Seen It All: The Autobiography on Rolling Stone.com.
Stuck in prison on gun charges as this seventh studio album saw release, Atlanta rapper Young Jeezy -- or now, just Jeezy -- mentions he doesn't "eat, sleep, or shit" without his m-f'n pistol.
Album review: Jeezy - Seen It All: The Autobiography. Ultimately one-dimensional despite some outstanding highs…
On Seen It All, Jeezy proves you don’t need to overcome your own one-dimensional lyrical perspective in order to become a trap star.