MTV Unplugged No. 2.0

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (73 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
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  • Artist: Lauryn Hill (See All Albums by Lauryn Hill)
  • Date Released: May 7, 2002

  • Genre: Rock/Pop, Style: Pop

  • Label: Columbia

Total Tracks: 22   Total Length: 106:36

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A Hidden Treasure

MDIM

If you feel the need for something real in music, then this album is it. Like Lauryn says "I've retired from the fantasy." In some songs, you may think she is singing about separating from an ex-lover, but she is really talking about separating from her flesh. Society today is inundated with music that maims the soul with worthless lyrics. This album brings healing to the soul and conveys a message to humanity: true freedom is in Christ. Her message isn't religious; it's actually quite the opposite. Just listen and gain an entirely new insight.

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If you're a thinker...

JoJoIndy

I must agree, this album is no comparison to her first because to date, it's her best.If you take the time to LISTEN to what she has to say, instead of waiting for catchy choruses and 808 beats,maybe you too would be enlightened.Maybe you'd start to think about our society and what part you play in it? Or do you play the part of the "dumbed down spoiled american that knows nothing about history, politics, or spirituality who spends their time thinking of themselves and has no clue about what goes on in their own country let alone others"?!

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Not Worth it!

knighttyme1976

While I have to admit Lauryn is a great lyrics composer, however her musicianship needs a lot of work. Seems like she is playing the same 3 chords for every song. Its hard to listen to more than 2 songs.

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Worth both time and money...

EMUSIC-017D9FA3

I hate wasting these downloads. More than that, I hate wasting my more valuable (to me, at least) time. This album was done as a part of MTV unplugged and much was said about it at the time. Most of what people said was not good. Because I thought Miseducating was so brilliant, I thought this was worth taking a chance on. Yes, it is certainly eclectic and the term genius should probably be modified by the word eccentric, but all if it is here. By the way, those who cherry pick only the tunes, skipping Hill's commentary are really missing out.

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Get It

Jacked Up Jazz

This quite probably is Lauren's finest work to date. Her talent is always on display, but her previous work was equal parts talent and hype. This is raw and real. Emotionally unstable? Yep! But there is no doubt that you are getting the real thing here. This was released in the wake of lawsuits and accusations that she failed to credit co-creators for their collaborations. Here it is just Lauren, her guitar and her instability with something to prove and pudding is everywhere. This is her "I'm Rick James bitch" moment. Had she conformed she could have dominated top 40 for a year or more with this material. But that's the point, she is (or was) done conforming. You might consider skipping the dialogue tracks, they are revealing but an expensive download, especially in light of album pricing.

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beautiful

EMUSIC-02028A72

In addition to awesome music, the album also offers up many inspiring and uplifting anecdotes from lauryn. its may be the most sincere and genuine musical performance i have ever heard. lauryn hill is the hottest chic in the game.

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They Say All Media Guide

Lauryn Hill’s debut album, The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, became a critical and commercial blockbuster, which the artist herself, always distrustful of the music business, seems to have found a disorienting experience. She has therefore waited nearly four years to make another album, and the album she has made deliberately flies in the face of the previous one and its reception. Resurrecting the MTV Unplugged program, she has gone before an audience with an acoustic guitar in her hands to sing a new group of songs. But that unadorned approach is only the beginning. Everything about the performance is unpolished. One suspects that she would resist even calling it a performance; “I used to be a performer,” she notes at the outset. What she is after, in her life and her music, she explains, is “reality,” which means everything from being willing to sing the entire set with a raspy voice because that’s the state her voice is in on that day to stopping and starting, going up on the lyrics, and even breaking down in tears. The style naturally places an emphasis on the words to the songs, which reinforce Hill’s unvarnished approach, attacking the music business and anyone who wants her to be what’s she’s not, and witheringly criticizing institutions such as the judicial system (“Mystery of Iniquity”). The songs themselves would not require two discs to contain, but they are alternated by lengthy remarks, one spoken interlude running more than 12 minutes, in which Hill elaborates on the importance of being honest and confronting falsehood. She’s usually full of herself, and she’s often full of it. But that’s okay. The point is the unfinished, unflinching presentation of ideas and of a person. It may not be a proper follow-up to her first album, but it is fascinating. – William Ruhlmann

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