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・ Port of Maoming
・ Port of Maryborough
・ Port of Mayagüez
・ Port of Medgidia
・ Port of Meizhou Bay
・ Port of Melbourne
・ Port of Melbourne Authority
・ Port of Melbourne Corporation
・ Port of Memphis
・ Port of Menteith
・ Port of Merak
・ Port of Merca
・ Port of Mersin
・ Port of Messina
・ Port of Miami
Port of Miami (album)
・ Port of Midia
・ Port of Milwaukee
・ Port of Mina Al Fahal
・ Port of Missing Girls
・ Port of Mobile
・ Port of Mogadishu
・ Port of Mokpo
・ Port of Moldova Veche
・ Port of Mongla
・ Port of Montevideo
・ Port of Montreal
・ Port of Montreal railway
・ Port of Morrow
・ Port of Morrow (album)


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Port of Miami (album) : ウィキペディア英語版
Port of Miami (album)

''Port of Miami'' is the debut studio album by American rapper Rick Ross. Originally titled ''Career Criminal'', the album was renamed, in reference to Miami being a major arrival destination for cocaine shipments to America. The album was released August 8, 2006, on Slip-n-Slide Records, Def Jam Recordings and Poe Boy Entertainment. The album was engineered by Miami based songwriting and production team The Monsters & The Strangerz. The album debuted at number one on the US ''Billboard'' 200, with 187,000 copies sold in its first week. In 2010, Rhapsody called it one of the best "coke rap" albums of all time.〔(Album Guide To Coke Rap ) Referenced 26 July 2010〕
The album's first single, "Hustlin' ", has received an exorbitant amount of airplay. The remix version features Jay-Z and Young Jeezy. The album's second single, "Push It", produced by J. R. Rotem. This track samples the song "Push It to the Limit" from the movie ''Scarface''. ''Port of Miami'' was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America on November 8, 2006 with over 500,000 copies. According to Soundscan, the album has sold 857,000 copies to date.〔http://oi33.tinypic.com/2q8oilv.jpg〕
==Critical reception==

''Port of Miami'' was met with generally favorable reviews from music critics. Michael Endelman of ''Entertainment Weekly'' said, "On ''Port of Miami'', Ross turns the minute details of drug distribution and dealing into ominous, slow-rolling songs, like the hypnotic, organ-driven hit single ”Hustlin”’ and the Scarface-goes-South Beach stomp of ”Cross That Line.” In general, the whole ”crack-rap” trend (see: Young Jeezy, Clipse) is a disheartening one, but Ross’ pulpy debut manages to enthrall despite the drug-centric lyrics."〔 Sam Ubl of Pitchfork Media said, "''Port of Miami'' is a case of invention begetting necessity. Sure Ross needs these beats—he has all the charisma of a cold meatloaf. But they need him all the same. He's a supporting actor, second fiddle to the real, Pro-Tooled stars, desirable not for his authority or presence but for his utter blankness. Def Jam could heli-drop any bozo into such glorious ambiance and score some hits; the album facilitates sedentariness."〔 Jonathan Ringen of ''Rolling Stone'' said, "Ross' minimal, menacing rhymes about being a drug-game kingpin feel a little undercooked, but with synth-soaked ring-tone-ready beats that are hotter than the "MI-Yayo" in the summertime (mostly by local beatmakers Cool and Dre, DJ Khaled and the Runners), it doesn't really matter."〔 Brendan Frederick of ''XXL'' said, "While the runaway success of “Hustlin’” could have positioned Ross for one-hit-wonder status, he confidently sidesteps this fate by delivering the goods on ''Port of Miami''. With a cohesive sound the city can call its own, the bearded rapper gets the release he needs by exposing the dark side of the Sunshine State. His name is Rick Ross, but Miami will remember him by a new name: BOSS!"〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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