Curren$y, who has already entrenched himself as more than just a “weed rapper”, delivered his critically acclaimed The Drive In Theatre in February, and followed that with Saturday Night Car Tunes in August. Spitta, who is one of the few artists known for his meticulous output has stayed thoroughly consistent and his Jet life Crew has flooded the mixtape game right along with him. 2011's Jet Life To The Next Life and 2011/2012's Jet World Order albums gave immediate notice to the crew where they dismantled tracks on a wide range of smooth instrumentals. Just one year after their mixtape Red Eye, Spitta's flight squad is back with Organized Crime. It takes you straight into their message of mafia music, while not straying too far away from their gangsta and marijuana rap vibes.

The mixtape features solo tracks from each of the Jet Life members, and all go in with hard rhymes. The incumbent intro to Organized Crime felt like a simulation of Tony Montana and Scarface; with its cover art just as gritty. With the opening words of “What’s life about?” and its cringing iteration of continuous loyalty of not betraying who you are; the full length mixtapes’ true intent is easily heard in lyrics of them rapping about what living the Jet Life really means.

Ty, one of the Jet life members who dominated the bulk of the mixtape, has standouts like “Fully Loaded” and “My Nigga”, in moments even reminding you of Boosie. Along with "Palace" from Curren$y, the songs made the entire compilation refreshingly good. Spitta explains in the track of the Jet Life lifestyle and goes in on how he has outlasted so many. He spits, “I live in the palace and smoke on ‘em gasses/My cars are all classic and fast as the Flash is/Behind the back passes yo bitch made advances, Makin’ em sound more elaborate/Which is pretty much magic, 'cause this one was already nasty/Notice that I have outlasted a couple of folks in my class, but I do more smokin’ then braggin”."

Young Roddy's performance on “Boost Mobile” is perhaps one of the dopest songs on the mixtape, with a feeling of Lauryn hill’s “Doo Wop” carrying the track. It will have you cranked back driving and bumping to its feel-good moments all day. Young Roddy states that only thrill niggas can hop and rap on this beat after him. He raps about how he might be too real for mainstream, but like an architect, he’s steady building his business and even says there ain’t too many out here going harder than him.

Ty and frequent Curren$y collaborator Le$ on "Why You Hating" shine with their chemistry on the boastful track, practically speaking their mind on haters. But as Curren$y has stated before, the Jet Life has to consist of bankrolls and excessively expensive cars, so it instantly switches gears to that with "See Me Ball" and "Young Ballers." You can never have enough of these kind of anthems.

In hindsight, the entire project is solid in terms of allowing each member to show what they are capable of. Ultimately, he allows his crew members to take the wheel on every record, allowing the entire Jet Life mantra to be in the forefront. It's a perfect setup for their next group compilation that'll more than likely turn heads again. Jet Life to the next life, all day.—Sarah Alston

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