| Name | Artist | Time | Price | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
1
|
Explicit Intro | Mims | 2:13 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
2
|
Explicit It's Alright | Mims | 3:17 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
3
|
Explicit This Is Why I'm Hot | Mims | 4:13 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
4
|
Explicit Girlfriends Fav MC | Mims | 3:39 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
5
|
Explicit Where I Belong | Mims | 3:52 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
6
|
Explicit Cop It | Mims | 3:01 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
7
|
Explicit Big Black Train | Mims | 3:55 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
8
|
Explicit They Don't Wanna Play | Mims | 4:05 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
9
|
Explicit Like This | Mims | 3:23 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
10
|
Explicit Just Like That | Mims | 3:20 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
11
|
Explicit Without You | Mims | 4:12 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
12
|
Explicit Superman | Mims | 3:27 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
13
|
Explicit This Is Why I'm Hot (Blackout Remix) | Mims | 3:37 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
14
|
Explicit Doctor Doctor | Mims | 3:41 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
15
|
Explicit Don't Cry (Outro) | Mims | 4:06 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
16
|
Explicit I Did You Wrong | Mims | 3:31 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
| Total: 16 Songs |
Album Review
Having a top rap song on the Billboard charts in 2007 is not exactly an unusual accomplishment. Commendable, yes, but a hit single does not mean that the full-length record will be met with much success, nor necessarily should it be. Fortunately for New York (specifically, 164th Street in Manhattan's Washington Heights neighborhood) MC MIMS follows up his hit "This Is Why I'm Hot" with an album that proves his place on the charts is based on talent as well as luck. MIMS has an advantage over some of his peers because he knows and respects not just old-school hip-hop, but also current trends and his own place in them. He represents the East Coast, and he wants to revive New York's reign ("bring it back it back on top," he says again and again), but he doesn't dismiss what other rappers out there are doing, too. The deceptively simple "This Is Why I'm Hot" demonstrates this well. MIMS raps about his nationwide appeal over hyphy-esque production that alludes to other influential MCs (the synth line from "Ain't Nuthin But a 'G' Thang" added in when he mentions California, the choral entry notes from Kanye West's "Jesus Walks" that play when he "hit[s] the Chi"), MCs that he clearly wishes to compare himself to and that he wishes he could be; he's drawing from other styles to make his own more relevant. The rhymes themselves aren't fantastic here — MIMS is a lot more impressive in some of his other songs — but the hook is catchy and easy to remember, and it's a lot of fun: something East Coast rap sometimes forgets to be. The rapper is also able to, like N.Y.C. heroes Nas and Jay-Z, both of whom have clearly influenced him, occupy that space between "thug" and "backpacker," moving between club-friendly, bass-heavy tracks like "They Don't Wanna Play" (which features verses from Bun B and Seed) or "Just Like That" and more reflective and critical songs like "Where I Belong" and "It's Alright." He can focus on the serious, the sentimental, or the fun side of life when he needs to, but he does it all without seeming like he's forcing out a persona. This versatility should make MIMS appeal to the kind of variety of listeners that someone like Jay, Nas, or Kanye can, and if he keeps it up, it should make Music Is My Savior a big step forward for the state of mainstream East Coast hip-hop.
Customer Reviews
Undoubtedly the Most Mediocre, Cliched Piece of Garbage to Corporate Machine in Years
After the universally loathed single, "This Is Why I'm Hot," wherein Mims cites his knowledge of US geography as the reason for his intangible charisma, I wasn't expecting much, and not much is what I got. "Like This," a club thumper that is bound to get some radio play takes dumbing down to a new level. Girlfriends Fav MC (Mims apparently doesn't know how to use the possesive for all his intrinsic hotness) takes what could have been at some point passable beats and molds them into a Frankenstein of percussive filth, over which he lays down such glowingly intellectual metaphors as "I'm a star like the ones in the sky." The days of Mobb Deep, Grandmaster Flash, and A Tribe Called Quest seem distant, and even Blackstarr's bright star seems faded as the Corporate Machine churns out yet another useless and meaningless album which will undoubtedly top the charts because it has been predetermined as yielding the most cash so that Viacom execs can add a guest house to their villas in the Bahamas.
If this album even goes gold then Nas was right and hip hop is dead
MIMS is the quintessential wanksta - he admits that he was "inside and home early" and yet makes references to poppin' and hustlin' akin to those rappers (see Jay Z, T.I., Slim Thugg) who actually ran the streets. Seriously, MIMS, if you're a sheltered mama's boy then rap about being a sheltered mama's boy - there is nothing gangsta about making your curfew. MIMS is redundant (Track 9 "Like This is followed directly by Track 10 "Just Like That") and having the "Number one ringtone" is in no way indicative of MIMS skill as a rapper - being marketable and being talented are two very different qualities. Combine all this with MIMS constant reassertions of "flyness" (see this is Why I'm Hot and the entire chorus of Superman) and you get the steaming piece of garbage that is this album.
This is Why You're Not
You're not cuz you wack
And I don't like that
This is why, this is why your album falls flat
That wasn't too hard for me to do. It's much better than the lyrical garbage Mims coughed up on his excruciating debut, Music is My Savior. Considering the quality of this album, it's easily determined that music is not Mims' savior, at least not good music. From the beginning piano notes of Intro to the tired beat of I Did You Wrong, this album is riddled with every bad rap cliche you can think of. To me, it's really kind of embarrasing that a record company would spend any amount of money releasing this to the public and expect people to buy it. Until Kevin Federline or Fergie comes out with an album in the next few months, this is probably the worst record of 2007 yet.
Biography
Born: March, 1981 in New York, NY
Genre: Hip Hop/Rap
Years Active: '00s
Top Albums and Songs by Mims
| Name | Album | Time | Price | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
1
|
This Is Why I'm Hot (Edited) | This Is Why I'm Hot - Single | 4:18 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
2
|
Explicit Move (If You Wanna) | Move (If You Wanna) - Single | 3:12 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
3
|
Explicit Like This | Music Is My Savior | 3:23 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
4
|
Explicit This Is Why I'm Hot | Music Is My Savior | 4:13 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
|
5
|
This Is Why I'm Hot | Music Is My Savior | 4:13 | $1.29 | View In iTunes |
- $7.99
- Genres: Hip Hop/Rap, Music, East Coast Rap, Hip-Hop, Hardcore Rap
- Released: May 14, 2007
- ℗ 2007 Capitol Records, Inc.. All rights reserved.

