LAX (album)

LAX
Studio album by The Game
Released August 26, 2008 (2008-08-26)
Recorded 2007–08
Genre
Length 76:28
Label Geffen
Producer
The Game chronology
Doctor's Advocate
(2006)
LAX
(2008)
The R.E.D. Album
(2011)
Singles from LAX
  1. "Game's Pain"
    Released: April 29, 2008
  2. "Dope Boys"
    Released: June 24, 2008
  3. "My Life"
    Released: August 5, 2008
  4. "Camera Phone"
    Released: January 12, 2009

LAX is the third studio album by American rapper The Game. It was released on August 26, 2008, by Geffen Records.[1] Recording sessions took place from 2007 to 2008, with the production that were contributed by Cool & Dre, Kanye West, Scott Storch, Nottz, Hi-Tek, J.R. Rotem and JellyRoll; as well as guest appearances from Chrisette Michele, Common, Ice Cube, Keyshia Cole, Ludacris, Nas, Ne-Yo, Raekwon, Raheem DeVaughn, Travis Barker, Bilal and Lil Wayne. The album was supported by four singles: "Game's Pain" featuring Keyshia Cole, "Dope Boys" featuring Travis Barker, "My Life" featuring Lil Wayne, and "Camera Phone" featuring Ne-Yo. The album was released with two different cases such as one cover art for the deluxe version with Game looking at the camera with his Bandanna in his hand, and a one of each cover art for another was with him sitting on a couch smoking a blunt.

LAX debuted at number 2 on the US Billboard 200, selling 238,000 copies in its first week, behind a metal band Slipknot's All Hope Is Gone. At first, it looked like that The Game's album LAX was setting to debuted ahead of their All Hope Is Gone album by gaining his worldwide sales of 13 copies; with such a close difference, these Slipknot's record labels Warner Music Group and Roadrunner Records were asking for their Nielsen SoundScan recount to be their historic first. As Nielsen proceeded their recount, they placed The Game's LAX album at number 2, with his first week sales of 238,382 copies in the United States, and then placed Slipknot's All Hope Is Gone album to their first position, with their first week sales of 239,516 copies scanned, a margin of 1,134 copies in the United States.

Initially, Billboard published an article stating that The Game had secured the top spot with a margin of 13 units, in what was described as the "closest race for number one since SoundScan began tracking Data in 1991".[2] After a recount 12 hours later, the article was rewritten and Slipknot was awarded the number one spot, having sold 239,516 units.[2] As of September 2011, the album had sold 968,000 copies.[3] Upon its release, LAX received generally favorable reviews from most music critics, with music critics praising the album's production.

Background

After signing a deal to Interscope Records and Dr. Dre's Aftermath Entertainment vanity label, who he's been reaching to the agreement that only happened once, after Interscope Records' head COO Jimmy Iovine was debating on whether to drop this young upstart or keep him, he later convinced 50 Cent to take Game under his wing in his effort to guarantee for record sales. In 2005, The Game released his debut album, The Documentary, which sounded entirely different from his follow-up and his second album that was released only a year later with Doctor's Advocate, where he has been gaining more of his experience what it comes to choice on genres. After two albums that were driven him into worshipping to legendary West Coast producer Dr. Dre, plus he would involved in to his later feuds with fellow rappers such as 50 Cent and the G-Unit crew, The Game's third effort would be his most important release and the strongest argument, and yet this would just might be the time to move on. On December 31, 2007, at the Nas' New Year's Eve party, The Game announced the title and release date for the album.[1] On May 16, 2008, The Game appeared on 106 & Park, to announced that his upcoming third album LAX would be his final album, while promoting his record label called The Black Wall Street. However, in a interview, The Game did said that after his third album, he would be releasing his upcoming fourth album, called D.O.C. (which is for the abbreviation of Diary Of Compton), that its if he can get some of the production help from Dr. Dre, MC Ren, King Tee, DJ Yella, Ice Cube and DJ Quik, among others.[4] However, he later did said that D.O.C. album would not be coming out and that his third album LAX would definitely be his final album.[5][6]

Recording

On May 11, 2007, The Game was arrested at his home reportedly in connection with an incident that happened at a basketball game in South Los Angeles back in February 2007. He was alleged to threatened a person with a gun. The arrest took place after his home was searched for three hours. The Game was released early the next day after posting $50,000 bail.[7] On January 9, 2008, a Los Angeles judge scheduled February 4, as the beginning date for The Game's trial on assault and weapons charges.[8] After pleading no contest to a felony weapons charge on February 11, The Game was sentenced to 60 days in jail, 150 hours of community service, and three years of probation.[9] In March 2008, it was reported that The Game had been released from jail. His manager later stated that he has not yet been what you expected to be released in time to promote the album.[10] He was released after serving eight days, and went back in a studio and begin working with the production duo Cool & Dre.[11] Dre from Cool & Dre stated that The Game was like 'Pac, and that lyrically, he was "[somewhere] else right now".[11] On July 28, 2008, The Game told J. Hyphen and J. Moore of Sunday Night Sound Sessions, that the album has been finished, and that the official release date was August 26, 2008. He said that the album would include 16 tracks, and that he would've leaked the clean version for a album two weeks before the official release. The Game did mentioned that he recorded over 220 tracks for the album. In these recording sessions, artists that were been reported would participated for LAX, at first Nu Jerzey Devil stated that Lil Wayne[12] would be making his guest appearance on the album. It was later confirmed that Akon, André 3000, Busta Rhymes,[13] Chris Brown,[14] Chrisette Michele, Common,[13] Ice Cube, Keyshia Cole,[12] DMX,[15] Ludacris, Snoop Dogg, Marsha Ambrosius, Mary J. Blige, Nas,[16] Ne-Yo, Raekwon, Raheem DeVaughn, Fabolous, and Robin Thicke[13] were all be making their appearances, however, all of them did not make the final cut on the album.[17] Although Travis Barker, Bilal, Keyshia Cole, Common, Raheem DeVaughn, DMX, Ice Cube, Lil Wayne, Ludacris, Chrisette Michele, Nas, Ne-Yo, Raekwon, and LaToiya Williams were be making for the final album track listing.

All of these record producers that have been participating at this album's recording sessions with The Game were JellyRoll, Nottz, DJ Toomp, J.R. Rotem, Scott Storch, Kanye West, 1500 or Nothin', Travis Barker, DJ Quik, Knobody, Dahoud Darien, Hi-Tek, Ervin Pope, Cool & Dre, Irv Gotti, Tre Beatz, and Trackmasters. The Game had announced that Dr. Dre would be producing for the album, but neither Dr. Dre nor Aftermath Entertainment had confirmed their involvement for this album.[1] Nu Jerzey Devil later confirmed that Dr. Dre would be serving as a producer on the album.[12][18] On May 1, 2008, The Game told Power 106 that he had worked with Just Blaze, Kanye West, Cool & Dre, Scott Storch, Timbaland, Knobody, Ervin Pope, JellyRoll and Tre Beatz, among others.[19] At a listening party on June 23, 2008, it was mentioned that the production duo Trackmasters would be included for the album.[20]

Release and promotion

The album was pushed back to June 24, in competition for G-Unit's second album,[21] however, it was later changed to July 8, as Interscope Records moved both of these albums. On June 8, 2008, it was announced that LAX has been pushed back for week to July 15, which happens to be the same release date as Nas' Untitled album.[22] LAX has been pushed back for another week to July 22, and finally to August 26.[23] On May 1, 2008, The Game told Power 106 that "Big Dreams" might not be on the album.[19] On August 6, 2008, iTunes revealed some information on the album. It confirmed that DJ Toomp has produced a track, called "House of Pain" that would be released as the fourth single from the album. It also revealed that the standard edition would have 14 tracks with one bonus track, and the "deluxe edition" would have 18 tracks and one additional bonus track. On August 10, 2008, The Game told Friday Night Flavas, that he would be dropping two mixtapes; "Superman", featuring all original tracks, which did not appear on the album, in a week and a half and "You Know What It Is Vol. 5" after the album. He also blamed DJ Haze for the leak of the Just Blaze-produced title track "Superman".

Promo singles

The first street single was released on March 18, 2008 "Big Dreams" which is produced by Cool & Dre. The Game commented on Power 106 that the song would not be released on any specific album, including the upcoming LAX.[24] However, a modified version of the song, with different lyrics in the third verse, was later included on the bonus disc of the "Deluxe Version" of the album. Dre, from the production duo Cool & Dre commented that "'Big Dreams' is one of the most amazing records that I can honestly say that me and Cool have been a part of". Dre continued by stating "'Big Dreams' is a phenomenal record. It's very inspirational, It's gonna be big in the streets, but it's gonna be big all across the board. I feel like 'Hate It or Love It' was such an inspirational record that a lot of people didn't see coming. And this has the same feel as far as how it makes you feel, but it's gonna inspire the shit outta everybody. It's one of those records — his performance, his delivery, he's lyrically on a level that I can't even compare anyone to. He stepped it up to a notch that's amazing. He definitely has a new passion. And the fucking record is gonna really, really destroy."[25][26]

The second street single was "House of Pain" and it was released on August 19, 2008. The single is produced by DJ Toomp. The song "Touchdown" also debuted on the Hot 100 without being released as a single, it charted at number 57 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.[27]

Singles

The first official single "Game's Pain" featuring Keyshia Cole was released on April 29, 2008. It charted moderately in the US but was met with critical acclaim "Game’s Pain, Keyshia Cole sums up in one sentence what Game has been trying to say the whole album; "I just wanna let you know/ I’m paying homage 'cause you’ve paved the way for me." Game underscores the central themes of hip-hop’s history and his deserved place in it, meditating on the struggles he's faced." [28] The second single was "Dope Boys" featuring Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker, the video released was deemed to be too edgy to be aired on TV by BET, but it has been lauded critically as "not only one of the best collaborations on L.A.X. but also one of the best songs of Game’s career."[28] The third single released was "My Life" featuring Lil Wayne, when the song first leaked, many believed The Game was "dissing" Eminem. However, later on his website, Game denied this, and apologized to anyone who might have misunderstood what he had intended to say.[29] It charted well in the US reaching a peak of 21 in Billboard Hot 100[30] and it peaked at 4 for Hot Rap Tracks. The fourth and final single was released featuring Ne-Yo called "Camera Phone" on January 12, 2009, it was only released in the UK.

Tour

On May 21, 2009, The Game announced upcoming tour dates for performances in the United Kingdom for the summer of 2009. The West Coast-bred emcee made his first United Kingdom appearance since last December 2008. Game returned to the United Kingdom with three live dates confirmed across the country. Game assembled a coast-to-coast US trek to support his latest effort, LAX.[31] The club/theater outing was scheduled to visit nearly 30 cities, starting with several California performances in mid-February 2009.[32]

The tour Begin on February 18, 2009 and concluding March 29, 2009 stops included Los Angeles, California, Phoenix, Arizona, Sacramento, California, Portland, Oregon, Seattle, Washington, Boise, Idaho, Denver, Colorado, Tulsa, Oklahoma, Dallas, Texas, Houston, Texas, New Orleans, Louisiana, New Haven, Connecticut, Providence, Rhode Island, Norfolk, Virginia, New York City, New York and more.[21] The following year Game went on the European Club Tour 2010.[33]

Commercial performance

The album received favorable reviews from critics, debuted at number two on the US Billboard 200, with approximately 239,000 copies sold, just behind a metal band Slipknot's All Hope Is Gone. The album charted at number one on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums, and at number one on the Top Rap Albums charts. At first it looked like LAX had debuted ahead of All Hope Is Gone by 13 copies, with such a close difference, Slipknot's labels Warner Music Group and Roadrunner Records asked for a SoundScan recount, a historic first. Nielsen proceeded to the recount, which made no changes, and Slipknot in 2nd position with 239,516 copies scanned. Initially, Billboard published an article stating that The Game had secured the top spot with a margin of 13 units, in what was described as the "closest race for number one since SoundScan began tracking Data in 1991".[2] having sold 239,516 units.[2] As of February 2009, the album had sold 660,100 copies in the US.[34][35] By 2011 LAX had sold 968, 000 copies.[36]

LAX attained respectable international charting. In Australia, the album entered the Australian Albums Chart at number 12, in Austria, the album entered the Austrian Albums Chart at number 29, in Belgium, the album entered the Belgian Albums Chart at number 22, in Canada, the album entered the Canadian Albums Chart at number 2, in Denmark, the album entered the Danish Album Chart at number 18, in the Netherlands, the album entered the Dutch Albums Chart at number 21, in Europe, the album entered the European Top 100 Albums at number 14, in France, the album entered the French Albums Chart at number 19, in Germany, the album entered the German Albums Chart at number 33, in the Republic of Ireland, the album entered the Irish Albums Chart at number 8, in Italy, the album entered the Italian Albums Chart at number 2, in New Zealand, the album entered the New Zealand Albums Chart at number 11, in Norway, the album entered the Norwegian Albums Chart at number 18, in Sweden, the album entered the Swedish Albums at number 3, in Switzerland, the album entered the Swiss Albums Chart at number 8, and in the United Kingdom, the album entered the UK Albums Chart at number 9, and at number one on the UK R&B Chart.

Critical response

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic65/100[37]
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[38]
The Boston Globemixed[39]
Entertainment Weekly(B)[40]
The Guardian[41]
Los Angeles Times[42]
The New York Timesmixed[43]
Pitchfork Media(6.4/10.0)[44]
PopMatters(7/10)[45]
USA Today[46]
The Village Voicemixed[47]

Upon its release, LAX received mostly favorable reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 65, based on 20 reviews, which indicates "Generally favorable reviews".[48] About.com praised songs like Let Us Live as "Game puts on his best Nas impersonation as he flows off the beat with intricate and polysyllabic rhymes."[49] Allmusic writer David Jeffries noted "the cuts that truly matter on LAX aren't the ones where the rapper's hardcore, unswayable definition of loyalty comes into play but the ones that go outside the usual topics and explore both the profound (the African-American struggle) and, more surprisingly, the profane (rump shaking)" and that "this scattershot album is easy to recommend despite its flaws."[38] USA Today gave the album a perfect score saying "throughout, The Game flays rivals and trumpets his own skills and success. He attacks the beats — provided by the likes of J.R. Rotem, Kanye West, Cool & Dre, Scott Storch, Hi-Tek and DJ Toomp — with lyrical ferocity."[46] The A.V. Club noted "Only three major-label albums into his career, The Game has already appropriated the angst of rap's most beloved icons" and praised the album's production while stating "The Game has always borrowed from the greats. Here, he cannibalizes his own tired shtick so extensively, he lapses even further into self-parody."[50]

The New York Times, which previously said Doctor's Advocate was the best hip-hop album of 2006,[51] gave a mixed review saying that "Worse, the Game, never a fluid rapper, sounds positively lumpy, as if he were delivering verses while running up a steep flight of stairs, or as if the last few years of pugnacity have finally left him winded."[43] Entertainment Weekly noted "As on his first two efforts, he spends L.A.X. barking gleefully ignorant gangsta fantasies over hard-knocking drums. And while the 19-track disc could use a good trimming, The Game's routine is just as entertaining the third time around."[40] The Guardian's Angus Batey stated "LAX is an intense and remarkably focused record - almost every syllable concerns Compton, gangsta rap and (as one song title has it)."[41] Pitchfork Media stated that "Relatively, he's won Round 3 by making his third straight album that's better than it has any right to be-- but the fact that the Game can make perfectly uncompelling competence sound like victory is proof that he's a master thespian of hip-hop theater."[44] Jordan Sargent of PopMatters complimented The Game stating that "On LAX, Game hasn’t changed, but he’s picked a group of beats that get him closer to extricating himself from both his West Coast Messiah complex and the post-G-Unit narrative. And while Game has yet to carve out his own identity as a rap artist, LAX shows that, on his third album, he might be on the right track."[45]

The Village Voice commented that "Taylor's best assets remain his compellingly ruined wheeze of a voice, relentless delivery, and uncanny ear for beats" and that "Somehow, the Game is still coasting on wispy, West Coast–nostalgia fumes—chronic, red rags, lolos, etc.—but the goodwill, at this point, has pretty much exhausted itself."[47] Sputnikmusic's Tyler Munro noted it as a "Solid hip-hop, but excessive to a fault. Too many guests, too many shifts in style and theme."[52] Slant Magazine's Wilson McBee viewed it as The Game's best album Stating "With the Game's third and best album, LAX, which drops without the baggage of a high-profile beef, we learn more about who the rapper really is: a guy who loves hip-hop, from top to bottom, and is as comfortable giving shout-outs to Will Smith and Uncle Luke as he is to Wu-Tang and N.W.A" and "Listening to LAX is like witnessing the creation of a mural of hip-hop's history in which the artist paints himself hiding among the famous faces."[53]

Despite favorable reviews by critics and audiences, Game was critical about his album and says: "If I had a choice, I would say fuck L.A.X. and R.E.D. because I was kind of lost in trying to re-find the love for hip-hop[...]. He also doesn't feel the album was perfect by his standards compared to his previous album.[54]

Track listing

No. TitleWriter(s)Producer(s) Length
1. "Intro" (performed by DMX)Pope 1:20
2. "LAX Files"  
J.R. Rotem 3:59
3. "State of Emergency" (featuring Ice Cube)
J.R. Rotem 3:38
4. "Bulletproof Diaries" (featuring Raekwon)
Jelly Roll 4:52
5. "My Life" (featuring Lil Wayne)
Cool & Dre 5:20
6. "Money"  
  • Taylor
  • Lyon
  • Valenzano
  • Montilla
Cool & Dre 5:13
7. "Cali Sunshine" (featuring Bilal)Nottz 4:33
8. "Ya Heard" (featuring Ludacris)
Nottz 4:04
9. "Hard Liquor (Interlude)"  
  • Taylor
  • D. Davis
  • Pope
Pope 1:50
10. "House of Pain"  
DJ Toomp 4:32
11. "Gentleman's Affair" (featuring Ne-Yo)
J.R. Rotem 3:39
12. "Let Us Live" (featuring Chrisette Michele)Storch 4:39
13. "Touchdown" (featuring Raheem DeVaughn)1500 or Nothin' 3:59
14. "Angel" (featuring Common)West 4:28
15. "Never Can Say Goodbye" (featuring Latoya Williams)Pope 4:40
16. "Dope Boys" (featuring Travis Barker)
  • Taylor
  • Dopson
  • Edwards
4:00
17. "Game's Pain" (featuring Keyshia Cole)
4:21
18. "Letter To The King" (featuring Nas)Hi-Tek 5:45
19. "Outro" (performed by DMX)
  • Simmons
  • Pope
Pope 1:28
Sample credits

Personnel

Credits for LAX adapted from Allmusic.[56]

  • Travis Barker - Guest Appearance
  • Chrisette Michele - Guest Appearance
  • Chris Clancy - Marketing
  • Keyshia Cole - Guest Appearance
  • Dahoud - Producer
  • Raheem DeVaughn - Guest Appearance
  • Justin Dreyfuss - Marketing Coordinator
  • Andrew Flad - Marketing
  • Gary Fly - Engineer
  • John Frye - Mixing
  • E. Anthony Green - Composer
  • Bernie Grundman - Mastering
  • Shawn "Tubby" Holiday - A&R
  • Glenn S. Jeffrey - Guitar
  • Lil Wayne - Guest Appearance
  • Jay Mac - Keyboards
  • Jeff Mann - Promotions Director
  • Jonathan Mannion - Photography
  • Manny Marroquin - Mixing

  • Greg Miller - Publicity
  • Ne-Yo - Guest Appearance
  • Greg Ogan - Engineer
  • Christian Plata - Assistant
  • Ervin Pope -
  • Will Ragland - Package Design
  • Jimmy "Henchmen" Rosemond - Executive Producer, Management
  • J.R. Rotem - Arranger, Instrumentation, Mixing, Producer
  • Angelo Sanders - A&R, Executive Producer
  • Derrick Selby - Engineer
  • Andrew Van Meter - Producer
  • Kanye West - Producer
  • Tre Beatz - Producer
  • LaToiya Williams - Guest Appearance
  • Shorty (Da Lench Mob) - Guest Appearance
  • Betty Wright - Vocals
  • Ianthe Zevos - Creative Assistance
  • "Luscious" Liz Hernandez - Guest Appearance (Weather Girl in Cali Sunshine)

Charts

References

  1. 1 2 3 Omar Burgess (January 4, 2008). Black Wall Street Confirms The Game's Retirement Rumor. HipHopDX. Accessed January 4, 2008.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Jones, Alan (2008-09-05). "Slipknot claim first US number one, after chart mix up". Music Week. Retrieved 2008-09-06.
  3. "Rumor Mill - Game Won". HITS Daily Double. August 30, 2011. Retrieved November 7, 2015.
  4. The Game says "LAX" will not be his last album. Accessed June 13, 2008.
  5. The Game Takes Shots at Jay-Z on Phoenix’s 104.7 Kiss FM Accessed August 25, 2008.
  6. Game Speaks On New Album, Jay-Z Beef. Accessed August 25, 2008.
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  8. Black widow (January 9, 2008). Trial Date Set for The Game's Assault and Weapons Charge. SixShot. Accessed January 10, 2008.
  9. The Game Pleads No Contest to Weapons Charge, Sentenced to 60 Days in Jail. XXL (February 12, 2008). Accessed March 1, 2008.
  10. (March 11, 2008) Not so fast, The Game's still in jail Accessed March 13, 2008.
  11. 1 2 Game Headed to the Studio After Leaving Jail. MTV. Accessed March 20, 2008.
  12. 1 2 3 Tim "Styles" Sanchez (January 18, 2008). Nu Jerzey Devil: Heaven Sent. XXL. Accessed January 19, 2008.
  13. 1 2 3 SOHH Exclusive: The Game Follows 50 Cent's Lead W/ New Site, Plans Retirement | Daily Hip-Hop News|SOHH.com /
  14. THE GAME INTERVIEW WITH Incognito ‘Da Yungsta’
  15. Preview: The Game's New Album : VIBE.com
  16. Jokesta (July 9, 2007). Game Preps Final Album, Collabs With Nas & Akon. Def Sounds. Accessed July 26, 2007.
  17. Features : The Game: The AllHipHop Interview Part 1
  18. Shaheem Reid and Jayson Rodriguez, with additional reporting by Rahman Dukes. Mixtape Monday: Game Gets A Special Delivery From Dr. Dre; Prodigy Takes A Tip From 50 Cent. MTV News. Accessed February 24, 2008.
  19. 1 2 The Game in studio of Power 106 FM ''www.Compton-Game.de'' on YouTube
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  21. 1 2 Thomas A. Harden (April 20, 2008). SOHH Exclusive: The Game Vs. G-Unit, Rappers Prepare For A SoundScan Showdown. SOHH.com. Accessed April 20, 2008.
  22. LAX Pushed Back To August 26, Game Previews Album | Hip Hop News > HipHopDX.com
  23. The Game in studio of Power 106 FM on YouTube. Accessed May 16, 2008.
  24. Game is like 'Pac.
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  27. 1 2 "The Game LAX Review - Album Review of Game's LAX". Rap.about.com. 2011-03-10. Retrieved 2012-02-27.
  28. The Game Clears Up Eminem “Diss”
  29. Billboard.com - Artist Chart History - The Game
  30. Staff (2009). "The Game: LAX Tour 2009". Retrieved 2011-07-12.
  31. Staff (2009-02-02). "The Game Heads Out On Tour". Retrieved 2011-07-12.
  32. Taydoe TV (2010-11-04). "Game European Red Club Tour Episode 1". Retrieved 2011-07-12.
  33. "The Game Embarks On National Tour". Xxlmag.Com. 2009-02-02. Retrieved 2012-02-27.
  34. "Comments on: Poppin Or Floppin: Jahiem's Zoot Suit". Realtalkny.uproxx.com. Retrieved 2012-02-27.
  35. http://hitsdailydouble.com/news&id=280656
  36. http://www.metacritic.com/music/lax/the-game
  37. 1 2 Jeffries, David. Review: LAX. Allmusic. Retrieved on 2011-01-07.
  38. "This Game isn't worth playing to the end". The Boston Globe. August 26, 2008.
  39. 1 2 Vozick-Levinson, Simon. Review: LAX. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved on 2011-01-07.
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  41. https://web.archive.org/web/20080826034430/http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/music/la-etw-recordrack22-2008aug22,0,7686298.story. Archived from the original on August 26, 2008. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  42. 1 2 Caramanica, Jon. Review: LAX. The New York Times. Retrieved on 2011-01-07.
  43. 1 2 Cohen, Ian. Review: LAX. Pitchfork Media. Retrieved on 2011-01-07.
  44. 1 2 Sargent, Jordan. Review: LAX. PopMatters. Retrieved on 2011-01-07.
  45. 1 2 USA Today https://web.archive.org/web/20080901105354/http://blogs.usatoday.com/listenup/2008/08/this-weeks-re-3.html. Archived from the original on September 1, 2008. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  46. 1 2 Greene, Jayson. Review: LAX. The Village Voice. Retrieved on 2011-01-07.
  47. LAX (2010): Reviews. Metacritic. Retrieved on 2010-12-29.
  48. "The Game LAX Review - Album Review of Game's LAX". Rap.about.com. 2011-03-10. Retrieved 2012-02-27.
  49. Rabin, Nathan (2008-08-28). "The Game: LAX | Music | Music Review". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 2012-02-27.
  50. Sanneh, Kelefa (November 9, 2006). "Repentant Yet Defiant, a Rapper at His Best". The New York Times.
  51. Munro, Tyler. Review: LAX. Sputnikmusic. Retrieved on 2011-01-07.
  52. McBee, Wilson. Review: LAX. Slant Magazine. Retrieved on 2011-01-07.
  53. http://www.complex.com/music/2012/10/interview-game-jesus-piece-kendrick-lamar-life-is-good/page/2
  54. Play.com - Buy The Game - L.A.X. (New Version) online at Play.com
  55. Credits: LAX. Allmusic. Retrieved on 2010-12-29.
  56. "2008 Year End Charts: The Billboard 200". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. 2008. Retrieved 2011-04-23.
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