mySimon is not affiliated with or endorsed by Simon Property Group. If you are looking for Simon Property Group, click here.

The best metal cabinets as36818 p storage cabinet w adjustable shelves is sold out or discontinued. We found 1500 related products.

search.com
Arriving a year -- almost to the day -- after his superior Listennn: The Album, DJ Khaled's sophomore effort, We the Best, is a mixed bag. On the plus side there are the singles and highlights, all of them infectious, grand, and inspired. Leadoff single We Takin' Over is a star-studded, Akon-anchored anthem with swagger to burn, while Brown Paper Bag twists a grand sample of Yvonne Elliman's If I Can't Have You into a soulful tale of fast money. On the latter, Jeezy, Weezy (Lil Wayne), and Rick Ross add up to that rumored all-star edition of Boyz N da Hood that never happened, and if that isn't enough to draw the hip-hop regulars in, hearing the Game, Jadakiss, and Trick Daddy all on the same track, I'm from the Ghetto, certainly will. Last of the must-haves is B**** I'm from Dade County with Khaled, Trick Daddy, and production team the Diaz Brothers in fine pro-Florida form. Besides the Diaz Brothers, Cool & Dre, the Runners, Danja, and Caine Beats produce tracks while Khaled only helms two: the Intro (which barely counts) and Before the Solution, with Beanie Siegel once again covering his iffy relationships with Jay-Z and Dame Dash. Beanie has covered this drama much better elsewhere, up to and including his guest shot on Listennn, but the other tracks that miss aren't as disappointing; they're just fair. Khaled doesn't help much by doing his usual Listennnnnn! and I represent the ghetto! shouts over songs he has little or no connection with, and while the man has said this effort isn't about his production skills but rather music he loves, it seems like all the more reason to stay out of the way. Maybe it's an effort to ease the geographical jumps -- from Florida to the Cleveland-repping Bone Thugs and on to New York -- or a way to keep the momentum rolling on this up-and-down effort. Instead, it just points out these shortcomings when they could have been less noticeable. Much more frustrating than a failure, We the Best earns a slight thumbs up if you think of it as a disjointed soundtrack or four-hit mixtape. ~ David Jeffries, Rovi
$15 Go to
DeepDiscount.com
Having lost career momentum and their major-label berth after the disappointing 2007 album Cold in California, Ingram Hill re-enlist producer Rick Beato (who helmed the breakthrough 2004 CD June's Picture Show) and again take dead aim at the Adult Top 40 chart and their young adult female fan base with their third full-length, Look Your Best. Lead guitarist Phil Bogard comes up with riffs that have just enough rock aggression without being off-puttingly hard, and lead singer Justin Moore's tunes have singable choruses. The lyrics, which Moore sings with aching sincerity, stick close to surface emotions, as he muses about the ups and downs of romance while living a life on the road and, at least a couple of times, seems to be complaining about the difficulties of dealing with the music business. But even when his job is getting him down, Moore knows it will be all right As Long as I'm with You. It's this sort of straightforward emotional statement that must make the band's female fans swoon, but that's nothing in comparison with the power ballad Hey Girl, an ode to feminine self-esteem, in which Moore assures plain Janes everywhere that it's them he's attracted to, not the hotties standing next to them who are trying to catch his eye. The song is designed to have audience members raising their cell phones in the air and waving them back and forth in solidarity. Pandering? Yes. But probably also irresistible. This is a guy who can even make a backstage encounter sound romantic in Miss Kennedy. There are, thus, several songs on Look Your Best that are capable of leading Ingram Hill back onto their upward career path with luck, hard work, and some promotion. (The group has eased out drummer Matt Chambless who, even though he plays on every track here, is not pictured on the cover and is credited only as a sideman. Ironically, that makes him the only member of the group, however erstwhile, to actually have his name in the credits. The remaining members seem to want to be known as Phil, Zach [Kirk, the bassist], and Justin, as they are in the acknowledgments, the better to seem even more fan friendly.) ~ William Ruhlmann, Rovi
$9.58 Go to
DeepDiscount.com