Landing Gear | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Devin the Dude |
Cover: | DevintheDudeLandingGear.jpg |
Studio: | The Coughee Pot (Houston, TX) |
Genre: | Hip hop |
Label: | Razor & Tie |
Prev Title: | Waitin Our Turn |
Prev Year: | 2007 |
Next Title: | Suite 420 |
Next Year: | 2010 |
Landing Gear is the fifth solo studio album by American rapper Devin the Dude. It was released on October 7, 2008 via Razor & Tie. Recording sessions took place at the Coughee Pot in Houston. Production was handled by Rockstar, Cozmo, Domo, C-Ray Sullivan, Destrukshon, D. Hatter, D. Washington, Chuck Heat, Luster Baker, Rob Quest, and Devin himself. It features guest appearances from 14K, Dee-Rail, G Monee, Joseph Edwards Jr., L.C., Snoop Dogg, Tony Mack and Young Malice. The album peaked at number 47 on the Billboard 200, number 9 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums and number 5 on the Top Rap Albums in the United States.
Landing Gear was met with generally favorable reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 68, based on six reviews.
AllMusic's David Jeffries wrote: "Devin's target audience, on the other hand, embraces sleaze, porno, weed, and hip-hop with plenty of memorable stingers, and seeing as how Landing Gear delivers on all counts, fans of Texas' most blunted rapper will once again be pleased". Steve 'Flash' Juon of RapReviews wrote: "it's fair to say that if there's one criticism of Devin that can truly stick it's that he takes the "Dude" aspect of his personality very seriously, and in few songs will you see him regard women as more than just objects of his sexual conquest. Nonetheless songs like 'Me, You' show he can still charm a girl or two". David Peisner of Spin resumed: "none of this will make Devin a star anytime soon, but that's less his fault than it is everyone else's".
In mixed reviews, Nathan Rabin of The A.V. Club found "Devin's singsong flow remains hypnotic, and his silky, seductive croon can make a dis feel like a kiss, but this time, it's in service to forgettable songs unworthy of his singular talent". Chase Hoffberger of The Austin Chronicle stated: "those slinky, drip-dropping beats and lyrical offerings trapped in a triumvirate of weed, women, and--somehow equally--coffee will leave nonindulgers thinking LG's a bit repetitive".