Search - Everlast :: Eat at Whitey's

Eat at Whitey's
Everlast
Eat at Whitey's
Genres: Rap & Hip-Hop, Rock, Metal
 
  •  Track Listings (13) - Disc #1

Swedish version of the hip-hop troubadour and former House of Pain member's third solo album, the follow-up to his breakthrough sophomore album 'Whitey Ford Sings The Blues'. Includes one bonus track 'Put Your Lights On' (...  more »

     
   
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CD Details

All Artists: Everlast
Title: Eat at Whitey's
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 1
Label: Tommy Boy Records/Ada
Release Date: 10/17/2000
Genres: Rap & Hip-Hop, Rock, Metal
Styles: Experimental Rap, Rap Rock
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 016998142820

Synopsis

Album Description
Swedish version of the hip-hop troubadour and former House of Pain member's third solo album, the follow-up to his breakthrough sophomore album 'Whitey Ford Sings The Blues'. Includes one bonus track 'Put Your Lights On' (feat. Carlos Santanna). Additional guests include, B-Real (Cypress Hill), Rahzel (The Roots), N'Dea Davenport, Cee-Lo (Goodie Mob), Warren Haynes (Allman Brothers Band & Gov't Mule) and Kurupt. 14 tracks in all including the single 'Black Jesus'. 'Eat At Whitey's' debuted at #20 on the Billboard 200. 2000 release. Standard jew

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CD Reviews

Im "....at whitey's" but the food not so good this time!!
gavin redmond | rep of ireland | 06/30/2004
(3 out of 5 stars)

"Let me start off by saying im a HUGE EVERLAST fan so this album disapointed me....just a little. After hearing his near perfect creation that is "whitey ford sings the blues" i was dying for more. What i loved about ".....sings the blues" was that it had an even balance of rap tracks and str8 up guitar songs. Unfortunately this time its more than 80% guitar and only 20% rap. Dont get me wrong, the songs are mostly top quality, but some of them i felt were mediocre at best such as "put your lights on", "mercy on my soul", "love for real" and "children's story" (which i never liked anyway). BUT the thing is, when he gets it right, EVERLAST gets it really right!!!! The best on the album are "whitey", "i cant move", "black coffee", "babylon feeling" and "one,two". The others i didnt mention are solid efforts but not standouts."
An interesting Album that impresses if you let it!
Zeb91 | Seattle, WA | 10/04/2005
(4 out of 5 stars)

"How do you begin this review? Everlast started out in House of Pain back in the day and then when they dropped off the face of the earth Everlast came with a blues/rock album that received a fair amount of praise. Then there was this, his sophomore effort. While not a bad album it does not always flow that smoothly. He opens with "Whitey" an interesting intro that you could totally see Bubba Sparxxx tear apart, but in all fairness this is the only time that Everlast sounds good over a beat on the album. The rest of the album goes back and forth between guitar based tracks and more traditional rap tracks. His style of rapping over rock beats has been done before but he sounds better than most. He is at his best playing a mellow blues riff and kind of half singing half rapping his verses. This album is by no means bad and actually it is pretty good but he should have ditched the rapping altogether, even if Kurupt sounds damn good on their duet "One, Two (12).""
Mmmm...mmmm
Lisa M. Swanson | Georgia--USA | 05/06/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Whitey can make me have goosebumps--the things he says. If you listen to what he is really saying, it is pretty deep. I love this album. I have had this album for years and the CD has just recently worn out and now I'm buying a new one. This is one CD I can't live without. As a woman especially, I feel he can be sensitive and raw, and tells how men can really feel about women, life, and the world in general. He is so diverse and unique. Two thumbs way up."