We Got This (Chopper City Boyz album)

We Got This is the debut album from the New Orleans rap group, Chopper City Boyz, led by rapper B.G.. It was released on February 27, 2007. The first single off the album is "Make 'Em Mad", produced by David Banner.

We Got This
Studio album by
ReleasedFebruary 27, 2007
GenreGangsta rap, Southern hip hop
LabelChopper City Records
Koch Records
ProducerB.G. (exec.)

Bass Heavy
David Banner
K.I.D.D.
B.G. and Chopper City Boyz chronology
We Got This
(2007)
Life in the Concrete Jungle
(2008)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic link
HipHopDX link
RapReviews(5/10) link
Rolling Stone link
The Source
XXL Magazine link

The album debuted at #21 on the Billboard 200, selling 27,000 copies in its first week,[1] which was also good for #1 on the Independent Albums chart.[2]

Track listing

#Title
1."Intro" (feat. Ziggler The WIggler)
2."Taking Over"
3."Bounce"
4."Make 'Em Mad" (feat. B.G.)
5."Thorough Street Nigga"
6."It's Real" (VL Mike Solo)
7."What I Like About Her" (feat. B.G.)
8."Flatliners"
9."Chopper City" (Gar Solo)
10."Never Had" (feat. Mercedes)
11."Knuckle Up"
12."Heart Of A Killer" (Sniper Solo)
13."Going On" (feat. B.G.)
14."Crucial Shit" (Hakizzle Solo)
15."Shake 'Em Off"
16."All Eyes On Me" (feat. B.G.)

Chart positions

Chart (2007) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums[2] 4
U.S. Billboard Top Rap Albums[2] 1
U.S. Billboard Independent Albums[2] 1
U.S. Billboard 200[2] 21
gollark: > checkmate simulation theory 😎If this is meant unironically, then no.
gollark: (Almost) nobody analyses a computer program by simulating every atom in the CPU or something.
gollark: There are, still, apparently reasonably good and useful-for-predictions models of what people do in stuff like behavioral economics and psychology, even if exactly how stuff works isn't known.
gollark: We cannot, yet, just spin up a bunch of test societies with and without [CONTENTIOUS THING REDACTED] to see if this is actually true.
gollark: > Everything can, and should be tested objectivelySay someone tells you "[CONTENTIOUS THING REDACTED] weakens the fabric of society" or something. We can take this to mean something like "[CONTENTIOUS THING REDACTED] leads to societies being worse off in the long run". How can you actually test this?

References


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