Port of Miami 2
“*Port of Miami* was the foundation I built the empire on,” Rick Ross tells Apple Music. “We’ve accomplished so much since then, and sometimes you just gotta reflect on that.” Thirteen years, nine albums, and too many hits to count later, Ross returns to the first brand he ever built, delivering a sequel to that seminal debut. Within it there are luxury raps aplenty, along with references to streets of Miami outside of South Beach, the area Ross immortalized in the music video for “Hustlin’.” *Port of Miami 2* isn’t just a continuation of the original, though—it\'s a project that allows Ross to revel in his legacy while adhering to a blueprint the MC executed on the original and continued to build from throughout his career. “*Port of Miami* 1, you talkin’ ’bout young producers, a new sound, a different vibe,” Ross says. “And this album, on track one, ‘Act a Fool,’ I felt like it made sense to kick the door in with an MMG foundation: the producer Beat Billionaire. His sound, with our energy.” \"Act a Fool\" also features longtime MMG cohort Wale; he joins Gunplay (“Nobody’s Favorite”) and Meek Mill (“Bogus Charms”) to reaffirm that the home team is fully intact. The raps on *Port of Miami 2* reflect the clout Ross has managed to acquire over the years. Instead of “I’m Bad” on the original, the always proud villain has graduated to “Nobody’s Favorite.” His “Where My Money (I Need That)” has yielded a “Rich N\*\*\*a Lifestyle,” and where he’d once had to announce “It’s My Time,” *Port of Miami 2* looks into the not-so-distant future toward a “Vegas Residency.” Within the project, Ross has also tapped a bevy of his favorite voices, including Swizz Beatz, who guests on the Just Blaze production “BIG TYME,” R&B upstart Summer Walker (“Summer Reign”), onetime adversary Jeezy (“Born to Kill”), and the dearly departed Nipsey Hussle (“Rich N\*\*\*a Lifestyle”), among others. Together, the group celebrates Ross’ legacy by way of performances that serve to buttress his oversized personality. “At this stage in my career, and being where the game is, the goofy shit is the way a lot of people promote the music now,” Ross says. “And me being where I\'m at, I can\'t do that. I gotta remain creative and just dope. The production, the wordplay, the concepts, you know?” Basically, the things that have gotten him this far.
Age has mellowed rap’s most audacious fabulist, and on the sequel to his breakout debut he settles into his luxe sound like a pair of velvet slippers.
Thirteen years ago Rick Ross exploded onto the scene with the earth-shattering street anthem ‘Hustlin’’.
Rick Ross, proud owner of several Wingstops and a Checkers, is now serving rap comfort food.
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Rick Ross firmly took his place as a Miami legend, and laid the groundwork for one of the greatest dynasties in modern rap in the process, with the