TIME VALUE RECORDS
Goldee Review
CD REVIEW FROM CALIFORNIA BASED MAGAZINE UBO
The talented artist Goldee hails from Hammond, Louisiana. From a region best known for Jazz, Creole cuisine and Mardi Gras festivities.

Goldee delivers, what some call a ‘brutal truth.’ In his album titled, “Hustle High/Hat Low,” he covers a spectrum of musical influences from gangsta-rap to smooth R&B.

However, the blend of Louisiana flavored street life experience is what makes this a stand-out album. It hits an emotional high note in the song, “Sweet Mary,” which is a beautiful tribute to his mother who passed away of cancer when he was 12-years-old.

In remaining tracks like the title track, “Hustle High/Hat Low” and “Baby Gurl,” Goldee chronicles his triumphant emergence into manhood. The passion and intelligence experience has brought him are evident in every word. A closer listen is always required.

Even behind the most dance-worthy hook is a story waiting to be heard. As experience has taught us, when flood waters come and the pretty veneer is peeled back, brutal truth is revealed.

Yet what is born of brutality also breeds advantageousness. This self-evident fact is bumped up a notch with the club worthy hit titled, “Louisiana.”

The fact is, there is something for every listeners musical taste. Make sure you sample it. The album will go down smooth, like the best southern gumbo with hot buttered monkey bread.
Murder Capital Allstars Review
The song "Keeps Comin' Up"

This cd just plain rocks. Fantastic arrangement and gritty guitars make this an incredible release. There isn't a bad track on this entire disc. All the songs are very hooky and dynamic. Be on the lookout for Murder Cpaital Allstars!
Mike Stahl - BandRadio


A driving and energy filled song. Powerful guitars and vocals mixed with a techo feel. It was hard to pick just one from this disc of totally cool tunes.
Mike Stahl - BandRadio.com

Raging but properly dolorous and slow metal fragment. Nice grinding bass line, too, a crucial plus. Good husky-voiced frontman who doesn't try to get too shrill... And there's an actual song with actual structure here, not just riffs pasted together.
Dave Marsh - Star Polish