Like Father, Like Son

| Birdman & Lil Wayne

Cabbagescale

84.6%
  • Reviews Counted:13

Listeners Score

0%liked it
  • Listeners Ratings: 0

Like Father, Like Son

Like Father, Like Son is a collaborative studio album by American rappers Birdman and Lil Wayne. The album was released on October 31, 2006, through Cash Money Records and Universal Records. Guest appearances include Fat Joe, T-Pain, Rick Ross, Tha Dogg Pound and All Star Cashville Prince. Producers included Swizz Beatzand Scott Storch. The album's first single was "Stuntin' Like My Daddy". The second single released from the album was "Leather So Soft". The third single was "You Ain't Know". All of those singles have music videos. -Wikipedia

Critic Reviews

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  • Sputnik

    Like Father, Like Son isn’t going to please those looking for an R&B inflection craving, or the hip-hop elitist’s ears.  

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  • Complex

    Like Father, Like Son aged well because it understood Wayne's strengths, and at that time, his biggest strength was his ability to embody its clichés, and to express them in fresh ways 

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  • Hip Hop DX

    Like Father, Like Son is a solid, creative album on which Lil Wayne and The Birdman go where others have failed – by doing an entire album of duos.  

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  • XXL

    With solid production throughout, Wayne’s ever-evolving sentence structure and Baby’s uncanny swagger, Like Father Like Son falters only in the diversity department.  

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  • Pop Matters

    Lil Wayne and his adoptive father, Birdman, produce an uneven collaborative effort with no shine in spite of its excessive bling.  

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  • All Music

    This is the sure sound of Cash Money steadying the ship and getting back on course.  

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  • All Hip Hop

    Birdman and Lil Wayne make Like Father, Like Son successful because they understand their dynamic well.  

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  • Noisey

    Like Father Like Son, which lives up to the standard of being a title track on one of Wayne's stealth best albums 

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  • Prefix

    It’s great to see Lil Wayne sticking around and getting his weight up, but at some point a compromise must be reached and new subject matter must be breached. 

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  • Rap Reviews

    In fact at times it's quite good, just incredibly contrived and unnatural in the process.  

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  • Exclaim

    Diversity training may be in order, as certain tracks inherit bad traits — too much synthesiser is the first symptom. 

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  • Nappy Afro

    Overall, this was a good album. Being that it came out in a bad year makes it even better  

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  • The Daily Aztec

    The release has the touch of creative genius  

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