Finally a hip-hop album that is honest, deep and thought provoking. I have been a big fan of Punch & Words since the early days of the Lyricist Lounge shows. So when I saw Words had an album out it was a no brainer, I had to cop it. Wordsworth takes the audience on a journey thru his struggles to become a better man, a better father, a better artist, and a better companion. You see and can feel his growth thru each different cut on the album. There is pain, happines sorrow and joy throughout the album. Yet you don't feel sorry for Wordsworth rather you feel grateful to have shared in his story. I couldn't help but think "Damn this is the album that Mos Def should have done". Mos Def's latest New Danger was a huge disappointment. I understand an artist wanting to grow, but damn you are not a singer Bee give that sh*t up. At least when Biz did it we knew he was joking. But I digress this is about Wordsworth and a celebration about real hip-hop. I love this album and if you are a true fan of real lyrics and dope beats than you will not be disappointed by purchasing this album. Oh yeah I also thought it was fly how Words put all the lyrics to each cut in the cd billfold. Just daring his fans to find any fault with what he has given them. If MTV, BET, XXL, The Source, Vibe, or Music programmers all across the country cared about hip hop then this album would be a Classic 5 mic album. Damn what I am thinking that [...] they listen to aint HIP-HOP that's rap. There is a difference.PEACE