Seen It All: The Autobiography

| Young Jeezy

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94.7%
  • Reviews Counted:19

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Seen It All: The Autobiography

Seen It All: The Autobiography is the fifth studio album by American rapper Jeezy. The album was released on September 2, 2014, through CTE World and Def Jam Recordings. The production was handled by several Southern hip hop producers, namely Drumma Boy, Mike Will Made It and Childish Major, among others. It features guest appearances from Jay-Z, Future, Rick Ross, The Game, Lil Boosie, August Alsina and Akon. - Wikipedia

Critic Reviews

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  • Pitchfork

    Jeezy's first album in three years is intermittently enjoyable, even if it completely cuts against the presumed goal of presenting Jeezy as an elder statesman of the South along the lines of Bun B or Scarface.  

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  • Hot New Hip Hop

    "Seen It All: The Autobiography" finds the trap legend at the top of his game, comfortable with his position, and ready to finally dispense true-to-fact game.  

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  • Slant Magazine

    On Seen It All, Jeezy proves you don’t need to overcome your own one-dimensional lyrical perspective in order to become a trap star.  

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  • Rolling Stone

    On Seen It All, Jeezy – who dropped the “Young” back when he’d only seen most of it – returns to the ominous beats and deliberate bars that made him famous.  

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  • Complex

    Seen It All: The Autobiography was worth the three-year wait.  

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  • Vibe

    His latest album Seen It All: The Autobiography as the most honest and revealing of his career.  

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  • Focus Hip Hop

    This album was pretty dope. It definitely got worse towards the end, but it was still pretty good.  

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  • HipHop DX

    At its very best, Seen It All is a glimpse into how Jeezy can make his living on the back nine in a crowded subgenre with no use for him anymore: By recalling the most chilling details of his drug dealing past with a flashback-like crispness.  

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  • All HipHop

    Jeezy's aggressive beats, trap rhymes, and signature ad-libs creates a sound that shows his progress album wise, but still has the play through like a mixtape. However, there are still some good songs worth checking out. 

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  • Exclaim

    He's a rare, diamond-encrusted rapper who still plausibly speaks for the poor.  

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  • iHipHop

    “Seen it All” is sure to be another classic anthem for all those in the kitchen; so as you’re getting the stove tops hot and that water boiling, be sure to have this album playing at a ridiculously high volume.  

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  • All Music

    Whatever the reason, Seen It All: The Autobiography shakes off all the challenges of Jeezy's lesser releases and finds new inspiration from the same old rap sheet.  

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  • The Advocate

    Jeezy’s style must be taken in for what it truly is: Not dissected for lyrical prowess, but simply an entertaining synopsis, which takes the listener inside a different perspective entirely. 

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  • Rap Reviews

    I can't and don't rate Jeezy as a top lyricist - he tends to repeat himself and his punchlines lack punch - but "Seen It All" is an album you can listen to start to finish and not hate yourself for buying it.  

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  • Artist Direct

    This is one of the year’s best hip-hop albums. This is who Jeezy is. 

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  • Passion of the Weiss

    Ultimately, Seen It All feels like an album that is caught out of season. It’s no longer winter for the Snowman. 

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  • Cant Stop Hip Hop

    Overall, Jeezy’s Seen It All is everything a fan could ever want from an album at this point in his career.  

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  • Nappy Afro

    Many rappers can’t stick to one subject for an entire project and keep it entertaining, but Jeezy did.  

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  • Surviving the Golden Age

    Seen It All feels like the best of Jeezy compressed into 15 tracks, which makes it his shortest album. Sometimes it is quality over quantity.  

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