Product Details
Against All Oddz

Against All Oddz
Lethal Bizzle

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Track Listing

  1. Intro
  2. Uh Oh! (I’m Back)
  3. Kickback
  4. Do It Feat Amina
  5. Mind Your Head
  6. Against All Oddz
  7. Slow Feat Kele Le Roc
  8. Had To Go
  9. No! Feat Fire Camp
  10. Fuck You
  11. The Truth
  12. The Best
  13. Should Of Known
  14. Hitman
  15. Till Next Time

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #186998 in Music
  • Released on: 2005-08-15
  • Number of discs: 1

Editorial Reviews

CD Description
Debut album from British urban artist Lethal Bizzle. This is the first offering from the former member of More Fire, who left to go solo in 2003. Mixing hip hop with classic grimey beats, Bizzle has already been compared to fellow UK mainstream artist Dizzie Rascal among others. The single 'Uh Oh (I'm Back)' is included.


Customer Reviews

Big Debut, Big Beats, Big Future!4
I must admit then when listening to and attending grime raves in the past i was not a fan of letahl B or his Fire Camp, mostly prefering to listen to artists such as Wiley and his RollDeep Entourage or Kano and his Nasty crew. However Lethal has managed to do the business with this debut solo album. The succuss comes partly from the fact that he had succussfully managed to merge the entities of the mainstream and the underground. Following hot on the heels of Kano's album release it is an exciteing time for the UK Grime industry. Although both have managed to do it, they have used vastly differing techniques for success. While Kano has calmed down his aggressive mcing style and gone for smoother urban beats alongside his distictive mc style, Lethal has brought his own brand of brashness to bear. His hard thumping baselines allied with his punchy mc style have made this album a success. While Wiley and Rolldeep moved closer to the mainstream with their release, Lethal has somehow managed to bring the mainstream to him. He has done this by only slightly compromising his beat making and lyrical content makeup. Thus resulting in genuine and authentic representation of the artist and grime industry, as oppossed to the total lack of representation and persona alteration that both Roll Deep and Wiley's album brings to the table.

stick to grime1
this is a bad album. Lethal bizzle's flow is distinctly amateur so it's a wonder anyone offered him a record contract. He may have been successful in the underground scene but thats where he should stay. The album tries to combine mainstream beats with lethal's 'underground' flow to disastrous effect. The result is tracks that don't quite come together. Lethal should stick to grime and not try to change his genre.

I hate tottenham hotspur