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Afroman Concert Tickets

Afroman (born Joseph Edgar Foreman, on 28 July 1974 in Mississippi) is a rap artist from South-Central Los Angeles, California, but later moved to eastern Palmdale (which he has referred to in his songs). His best-known song is the 2001 hit "Because I Got High", which gained popularity through Napster, local radio play, a feature on Howard Stern's radio show, and the "stoner" movie 'Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back' (and accompanying soundtrack). His other most popular song, "Crazy Rap", is often refered to as "Colt 45", because of its lyrics, "Colt 45 and two Zig Zags". Check our available Afroman concert ticket inventory and get your tickets here at ConcertBank now. Sign up for an email alert to be notified the moment we have tickets!


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Afroman Reviews

Avg. Customer Rating:
5.0 (based on 9 reviews)

If you're looking for a serious rap album that addresses important socio-political issues, the continuing struggle for hip-hop respect in the mainstream, and crisis within the inner city - you're reading the wrong review. Try Chuck D, or Dead Prez, or The Coup - down the hall and to your left.There's nothing wrong with music that makes you think, but by the same token there's nothing wrong with music that's just for fun - and in Afroman's world it's all about "The Good Times...
- rapreviews.com
Like a bush-league Biz Markie, the "Because I Got High" rapper is a hip-hop jester playing jokes on himself. The jokes aren't bad, but the biggest problem with this two-disc (!) set is the music itself, which backs up Afro's lazy flow with skittery, cheapass beats.
- www.rollingstone.com
Equal parts Bootsy Collins, Blowfly and Too Short, Afroman delivered the late-summer novelty hit of 2001 with his lowriding, singsongy "Because I Got High," a cautionary joke song that hit a nerve with frat boys and B-boys alike. The unfailingly good-natured Mississippi rapper makes a strong case for unabashedly songful hip-hop on his major-label debut album, The Good Times...
- www.rollingstone.com
Afroman's holiday album, Jobe Bells, captures the spirit of Christmas, releases it on bail, re-arrests it on an outstanding warrant and incarcerates it on larceny and possession charges. Known for his Internet crossover hit, "Because I Got High," the rapper carries on the venerable schoolboy tradition of singing rude lyrics to familiar songs. The tone is set from the first lines of the first track, "Lick my balls with lots of saliva" to the tune of "Deck the Hall...
- www.rollingstone.com
Like a bush-league Biz Markie, the "Because I Got High" rapper is a hip-hop jester playing jokes on himself. The jokes aren't bad, but the biggest problem with this two-disc (!) set is the music itself, which backs up Afro's lazy flow with skittery, cheapass beats.
- www.rollingstone.com
To commemorate the holiday season, Afroman graced the world with Jobe Bells, a collection of a dozen Christmas songs. These aren't your typical Christmas songs, however. "Deck the Halls" is recast as "Deck My Balls," "Silent Night" as "Violent Night," "12 Days of Christmas" as "12 J's of X-Mas," and so on. The 2 Zigg Zaggs accompany Afroman on most of the songs here, and the result is quite hilarious -- that is, assuming you share Afroman's twisted sense of humor.
- music.aol.com
It's the same old, same old from Afroman -- drinking, getting stoned, and getting in trouble. While his subject matter and lazy flow haven't changed a bit, with Drunk'n'High the rapper has settled into a comfortable indie life as explained on the highlight "Husler Man." "Go to your computer and select it/Shop online/And I'll ship it" promotes the man's cottage industry, and then he rattles off all the major music retailers -- some now dead and buried -- who have done him wrong...
- music.aol.com
Afroman's "Because I Got High" was this summer's surprise smash, a (slightly) cautionary, irrepressibly catchy pothead lament, delivered in a Humpty Hump-esque perma-yawn. The Good Times, Afroman's debut album, probably won't yield hit after hit (dude, where's my follow-up single?) but it's hardly the sack of musical shwag one might expect...
- www.blender.com
Google+ by Chris Robertson