While the “sales war” between 50 Cent and Kanye West has dominated music industry news for about the past month, there have been – believe it or not – other projects released worth taking a listen to. Devin The Dude Presents… Coughee Brothaz Waitin’ Our Turn is one of these projects.Those familiar with Devin The Dude will not be disappointed in the Coughee Brothaz, who put together 55 minutes of truly enjoyable music that will leave you wanting more at first listen. From the opening track “Rise And Shine” the Coughee Brothaz never take themselves too seriously and create their own unique sound, all the way to the country themed final track “Yee Haw!!” interspersed with chicken clucks, yodels and obligatory reference (for any Southern rap album) of codeine.The production on Waitin’ Our Turn is superb, flawlessly switching between uptempo beats (“Cockhounds”) and laid back tracks like on the super slap “Fresh Rims And Vogues”. While the Coughee Brothaz material never strays far from tales of the opposite sex, good times and inhaling large quantites of marijuana, it is sharp lyrically and fits the production to a spank white tee.Group albums often fall short when it comes to rap because of conflicting styles and talent levels especially when they’re the size of the Coughee Brothaz (a count of names in the CD booklet has the “unofficial” number of rappers on the album well over 20), but they manage to side step this problem with a surprisingly cohesive and complete project. While Devin is the unquestionably the headliner of the group and most gifted lyrically, the others are all more than capable when their time to flow comes and keep your heads bobbing with no significant fall off in talent.Aside from Devin not rapping on every track there is not much to complain about on Waitin’ Our Turn. While it is a little short for an LP (15 tracks, three of which are skits), it makes up for what it lacks in quantity with quality everything and not to mention a guest spot from rap legend Scarface on the aforementioned “Rise And Shine”. If you are a true rap fan, fifteen dollars at your local record store is a bargain for Waitin Our Tun.