01.01.2021

View Poll Results: Children of a Lesser God

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  • Classic

    4 15.38%
  • Superior

    12 46.15%
  • Banger

    7 26.92%
  • Average

    2 7.69%
  • Mediocre

    0 0%
  • Wack

    1 3.85%
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Thread: Children Of A Lesser God-Reviews

  1. #1
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    Default Children Of A Lesser God-Reviews

    Great year for the Wu overall. Bronze Nazareth is seriously putting in A LOT of fucking work just in 2010 alone (Handling 60's album, Vinnie Paz, 9th Prince, Hell Razah, Wisemen, soon to be Timbo King & Raekwon). Lyricism is definitely up on this, better then their debut. Nice drum work, love the jazz samples. Corn Liquor is some grimey old Wu shit...

    1. Intro
    2. Children of A Lesser God (Bronze Nazareth)
    3. Thirsty Fish feat Raekwon (Kevlaar 7)
    4. Faith Doctrine feat Beace (Kevlaar 7)
    5. Interlude-Don't Nut On My Bed!!
    6. Lucy (Bronze Nazareth)
    7. Get U Shot (Bronze Nazareth)
    8. Hurt Lockers (Bronze Nazareth)
    9. The Illness Part II (Kevlaar 7)
    10. Words From Big Rube (Skit) feat Big Rube (Bronze Nazareth)
    11. I Gotta Know (Kevlaar 7)
    12. Listen To The Wisemen (Skit) feat Minister Watson (Kevlaar 7)
    13. Panic In Vision Park (Bronze Nazareth)
    14. Do It Again (Supaa Maine)
    15. Interlude-Toxic (Bronze Nazareth)
    16. Makes Me Want A Shot (Bronze Nazareth)
    17. Victorious Hoods feat Victorious & Planet Asia (Kevlaar 7)
    18. Corn Liquor Thoughts (Bronze Nazareth)
    19. Outro-Hip Hop Blues (Kevlaar 7)

    13 Tracks in total. 7 by Bronze (not counting skits) 5 by Kevlaar 7 and the other by Supa Maine (even his is really good)

  2. #2
    Cilvaring's Father deezGlazedTonsils1981's Avatar
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    This album is really good

    off 2 listens my favs are:

    Lucy
    Get U Shot
    Hurt Lockers
    The Illness Part II (this one is the best on the album imo)
    Corn Liquor

    overall an amazing album though the drum patterns are fuckin dope!




  3. #3
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    Available on filestube....

    On the FIRST listen :

    I prefer 10 times the first album because beats here are just too slow and boring. I'm a huge huge fan of bronze nazareth but this time he didn't produced jewels except the groundbreaking track : "HURT LOCKERS" ! This track is just fire ! Didn't like too much kevlaar produced tracks aswell.

    Tracks i like :

    Faith doctrine (good)
    Lucy (fire)
    Get u shot (fire)
    Hurt lockers (pure crack)
    The ilness 2 (good)
    i gotta know (fire)
    Victorious Hoods (fire)
    Corn liquor thoughts (good)

  4. #4
    Battle-Scarred Shogun shogun85's Avatar
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    I actually enjoyed Children of A Lesser God more than Wisemen Approaching. Don't get me wrong, Wisemen Apprching is still a banger, I just enjoyed this one more. Beats are Bangin'! They all stepped their game up on this one.

  5. #5
    aka The Chaotica SHEEPISH LORD OF CHAOS's Avatar
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    def a dope album

  6. #6
    Hello, everybody! DR. NICK RIVIERA's Avatar
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    the skit on 'Get U Shot' is useless...well, most of them were...

    otherwise an album Wu fans could be proud of. No big problem with this album, maybe it's not gonna get as much rotation as the Skyzoo album, cuz it's not something an average hiphop fan is used to...but tell people around about it. K7, Bronze and others deserve it.
    bring back begongo!!

  7. #7
    king disguised as beggar. the silencer's Avatar
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    Default "Children of a Lesser God": The Silencer Treatment

    this is an insanely long review so lemme give you the short version first:

    1. Intro
    2. Children of a Lesser God 5/5
    3. Thirsty Fish (ft Raekwon) 4.5/5
    4. Faith Doctrine (feat Beace) 4/5
    5. Interlude: Don't Nut in My Bed!
    6. Lucy 5/5
    7. Get U Shot 4/5
    8. Hurt Lockers 4.5/5
    9. The Illness 2 - 5/5
    10. Words from Big Rube (feat Big Rube of The Dungeon Family) 5/5
    11. I Gotta Know 5/5
    12. Listen to the Wisemen (feat Minister Watson) 5/5
    13. Panic in Vision Park 5/5
    14. Do It Again 3.5/5
    15. Interlude - Toxic
    16. Makes Me Want a Shot 4/5
    17. Victorious Hood (feat Victorious and Planet Asia) 4/5
    18. Corn Liquor Thoughts 5/5
    19. Outro - Hip Hop Blues 5/5

    Beats 4.5/5
    Lyrics 4.5/5
    Overall: 9/10

    and the long version.....


    I think heads are sleeping on this LP majorly. I’ve realized a while ago that this crew consistently makes music that rewards dozens of listens. You can’t throw this record in once, twice, three times and be able to fully catch its dopeness (aside from a few instant BANGERS like Lucy), especially when there’s as much material as we have here. 19 tracks (including some instrumental interludes) with at least 6 different emcees dropping verses. And there’s really not a BAD, or totally skippable song on the whole LP. My least favorite is probably “Do It Again” but even that’s a pretty dope track as these guys seem to have a specialty for making grimy love/relationship songs. It’s hard to pick a BEST track because there are at least four that I find to be amazing. This is how an album should be. Even the goddamn skits are dope!


    When the first Wisemen album was dropping I didn’t expect much, was kinda thinking Bronze is just trying to put his crew on like Ice Water or Theodore Unit or something but then the quality of every song on that first album just blew me the fuck away. Every one of these dudes can spit and there are two beat geniuses on the boards. Children of a Lesser God builds towers over the previous material, though. They’re really innovating and elevating the style on this one while still holding to that core of pure raw hip hop. It’s like they’re takin it back and moving things forward at the same time.



    Album art:
    The cd has some great artwork/design and I really like the album cover. Great color combo of basically gold, bronze, blood red, and black with a texture that gives the cd case a cool look to it, like blood-stained parchment or somethin. That “WISEMEN” logo looks sick, I had forgotten how cool that is. Reminds me of the sharp wrought iron fences and gates around old cathedrals. You open it up and see a symmetrical set of Detroit buildings with a sky that looks like crack smoke hazes. Or else a bronze sky with blood clouds. The booklet is cool too with a little collage of images of the Wisemen. We gotta start moving away from these 2 page fold booklets though, I wanna see more albums with the LYRICS inside.


    1. Intro
    A down-and-out guttural voice pleads for help from a priest, with the striking “I want his [God’s] FUCKIN help!” emotional grab transitioning into…

    2. Children of a Lesser God
    prod by Bronze Nazareth
    performed by Bronze, Phillie, Kevlaar 7, Illah Dayz

    What an opening. Bronze bursts in with emotions, pleas, prayers over crashing drums and rising horn wails. For an album that so heavily emphasizes lyrics and especially visual lyrics this opening verse is a perfect way to set it off. In the span of a couple of bars he paints pictures as vivid as “Iron chains surround my city’s canvas/Brandish lanterns in overcast moments manly standin.”

    These lines are thick, heavy with meaning, almost everything he says has at least two meanings, even something as simple as the line “New release” which heralds the opening of his group’s newest album as well as a “secular fix” through which to channel and thus therapeutically release his aforementioned “bags of madness” (and ‘bags’ means both the screaming lungs or emotional ‘baggage’).

    All of this happens over the most heavenly, cinematic drum crashes, complete with what sound like live cymbal splashes.

    The chorus is short and simple but sweet and memorable. “Children of a Lesser God,” a title that sounds like music (or poetry) when spoken.

    At first I thought Phillie’s verse, speaking of jewelry and cars, was a weird and unexpected detour from what seems to be the theme of the song, but then I realized he’s not bragging. He’s basically praying for them and envisioning his hopes and dreams before coming back to earth saying “but we outside looking in.” Which also made me realize the overall meaning of the song.

    Kevlaar’s verse might be the best on the track as he enters the scene with some extremely powerful and passionate words. “At my peak I was crucified” is one of the peaks of the album. But Kev is envisioning heavenly dreams just like Phillie, looking at his kids “basking in glow” and acquiring much more than the simple necessities in life but, as gifted as they are as musicians, they’re ahead of their time (“It’s too early, truth is dirty”) and still having to struggle because the profession of practicing pure hip hop is not a lucrative one. I like Illah Dayz’ verse because he maintains the strong delivery and powerful speech of the song but some of his words are hard to hear and decipher. He doesn’t bring down the song though.

    This track is a desperate grasp towards heaven, a reaching up to the stars (as Phillie says: “tryin to reach my starbucks” and Kevlaar speaks of “trying to reach beyond the iron” meaning beyond a life of holding heat but also beyond the earth and its gravitational iron core to the stars), but it’s like a Daedalian flight (on wings made from the pages of their art) that then drifts back downward and falls back to earth. You can hear this in the beat as it’s represented by the ascent and descent of the horns which fall alongside the sound of a trickling harp. This descent is also in the distorted second bar of the chorus and the common theme of prayer-flights and back-down-to-earth-drops of each verse as each emcee has to resort to a “secular fix” because “low wages got me fucked up and pullin gages.”

    5/5


    3. Thirsty Fish ft Raekwon
    prod by Kevlaar 7
    performed by Bronze, Salute the Kid, Raekwon

    The drums, man. The motha effin drums. The knockin’ drumsticks sound almost tangible and the sample music is unbelievably smooth with all of its elements (including a guitar riff and jangling metal) conspiring toward the sound of a slithering, gritty blaxploitation-flick Cadillac cruising down a city street. I saw Cilvaringz describe this as the best Kevlaar beat he’s ever heard. I don’t know if I agree with that but it’s a pretty dope fuckin beat and it’s a perfect fit for the Slang Lord Wu general and biggest feature on the album, Raekwon the Chef, to tear into shreds. “Rockin them gun umbrellas,” Rae smoothly steps in and delivers his usual menu of short-sentence portraits and slang doctrines, plenty of memorable lines like “Welcome to the House of Flying Daggers.” Great to see the man who is perhaps currently the unofficial leader of the Wu stamping his approval of officialness on a smooth Kevlaar banger, it’s reminiscent of Gza’s slicing and dicing on the first Wisemen album (and in fact the albums have a very similar song arrangement, I think).

    Bronze gives a great introduction to the song, coining a new nickname for a blunt and letting the Kevlaar beat soak in “like some good soup” before jumping in and splashing wild paintbrush strokes with “blu-ray precision.” So many great one-liners and wordplay in his verse (his “nitroglycerin thesis”) and one of his many great lyrical performances on the album.

    It’s worth mentioning that through more and more listens, you’ll detect a number of recurring themes and images, similar references and lines throughout the album between all the emcees. This comes with writing together for extended periods of time but also I’m sure some of it is intentional. In this song, Bronze’s flow is “dripping more shit than pigeon” and Salute starts a line off with “style: rugby” while later on in Corn Liquor Thoughts, Salute “drop shit that magnetize niggas like flies” and Bronze speaks “rugby talk.” The more you hear the album, the more you’ll catch these.

    The key element and best thing about this album, giving it so much replay value, is the quality of the lyrics. No matter what the content even is, the lines are just so visual. An example is Salute here, talking drug-runner, crime material and his method is to use clever wordplay while drawing a verbal picture for almost every line. “For the bread, beat his forehead with the toast” and I’m picturing a karate-chop pistol-whip move by the dude from Super Fly. “No comparisons, fuck what you see on the tubes/They don’t play us on the radio so FUCK them too.” I do think Lute’s verse is a bit too long though.

    4.5/5


    4. Faith Doctrine ft Beace
    produced by Kevlaar 7
    performed by Phillie, Bronze, Salute, Kevlaar 7, and Beace (on the chorus)

    The drums and bass absolutely pound on here. The sample beams in like an outpouring of sunlight through clouds. Very cool beat, it seems to rise and then reach a plateau before spreading itself out. It almost creates its own space that, if your headphones or speakers are loud enough, can envelop you into it and surround you. Great musical experience.

    I would’ve liked to hear more from Beace on the album than just a single appearance on a chorus. I really like the message on this joint and the sample in between each verse. Kevlaar’s verse, with his own masterly-crafted beat disappearing underneath him and then rising up again, is the best part of the track for me.

    4/5

    5. Interlude: “Don’t nut on my bed!”

    There are a couple skits like this, seemingly natural conversations recorded and serving as perfect intros leading into the songs they precede (“Toxic” being the other one).


    6. LUCY
    prod by Bronze Nazareth
    performed by Illah Dayz, Bronze, Kevlaar 7

    Through my first few listens of the album, this was by far my favorite track. The drums crash so heavily, the tambourine hi-hats crash and the pace is fast and energetic and there’s just an insane amount of passion and emotion in the beat as well as the verses. This is a song about being driven nearly mad by a female, “I was in love, lust, and infatuated, stuck in a craze” and each emcee conveys this perfectly. I love everything about this song, each verse is great, the beat is so good that I can’t help but tap my feet to it every time I listen (even in public places), and the added instrumentation from Project Lionheart works perfectly on here with the rising emotive horns that seem to grow in strength as each verse descends into disarray and mental chaos (“I was all in as if my manhood was a sin”).

    Even with Bronze’s explicit Rza/Ghostface-esque pussy juice talk, this song must be played LOUD as fuck always.

    5/5



    7. Get U Shot
    prod by Bronze Nazareth
    performed by Kevlaar 7, Bronze, Salute

    One of the refreshing moments of levity on the album. The beat is pretty simple, consisting only of a piano loop over strong drums (weirdly, the beat reminds of Duck Seazon) and it’s got a comical Southern Baptist church feel to it, especially with the old folks chattering throughout.

    Kevlaar’s verse is excellent, so many great rhymes and descriptions and he is telling kind of a comical yet somber story. If you listen carefully, it’s a story about a slain gang member’s mother taking revenge by going out and gunning down her son’s murderer (“Ice Valentine”) and “now momma lookin for his team.” But “this ain’t no Sergio Leone movie” as much as it may sound like one.

    Bronze walks with the beat so seamlessly here with a great flow and a few great bars of his own, “So I’ma leave ‘em leakin in the light/Cuz blood shine like beacon/I’m co-signin to deacons, speakin to mountains.”

    Salute, as he does for pretty much every verse on the album, has great energy and a smooth pace in his flow. Definitely hungry and grabbing some serious shine on this album.

    The 2+ minutes of rambling at the end are hilarious when you listen to them and they serve almost as a break in the action or an interlude (or a skip point if you’re stepping along trying to jam out on bangers instead of sinking into the record). The final line is the funniest and transitions into the laughter opening the next joint…

    4/5


    8. Hurt Lockers
    prod by Bronze Nazareth
    performed by Salute, Phillie, Bronze

    Surprisingly, it took me a few listens before I caught on to how dope this track is. The beat is different than Bronze’s usual material, it reminds me a bit of “Blood Diamond.” The sample is distorted and chopped to pieces then played over knocking snares with barely any bass. Phillie’s repeated baritone chorus almost seems to serve as the bass.

    It’s the lyrics that make this track so great though. Salute sets it off with major energy, almost to the point of yelling his bars, and he’s “more thirsty than that puppet nigga posin’ for Sprite” [I take it that’s Drake and I can’t stand that dude].

    Phillie is dope as well, displaying a smooth flow infused with self-inflating swagger and a final line that I love: “Got game like Phil Jackson.” Of all the NBA references I’ve heard in rap songs, I’m pretty sure I’ve never heard an emcee liken himself to a coach but this is the Zen master with 11 rings we’re talking about.

    My favorite part of the song is Bronze’s verse containing some CRAZY lines, among my favorite:

    “Over the years my name etched in hall of fame,
    souvenirs left like BOMBIN BULLET TRAIN”

    “If hip hop’s deceased then show me the body bag!”

    “Rap circles around you like handcuffs and ankleweights”

    Only annoying thing is his lines occasionally get muffled behind the rapidly rolling drums.

    4.5/5

    9. The Illness 2
    prod by Kevlaar 7
    performed by Illah Dayz, Phillie, Bronze (on the chorus)

    Loved Part 1 on the first album and part 2 is just as dope. Insane beat, wonderful chops by K7 and Illah (the “Illahstrator”) rides this mofo very impressively. Phillie’s performance is great too with his extra coarse voice adding a gunmetal gray tint to his story-verse that molds together with the stir-of-echoes beat. This song creates the aura and atmosphere of a dark narrow alley with its ominous voices and horns and a chorus that sounds like a warning, “the Illness: trouble is where you find it.” All together (the beat, 3 verses, chorus) this is one of the joints I wanna blast everytime I go through the album.

    5/5

    10. Words from Big Rube
    prod by Bronze Nazareth
    performed by Big Rube of the Dungeon Family

    It’s only a 1-minute little interlude type thing but this track is magnificent. Make it loud; listen closely to the striking depths of this drumless melody. A veteran deliverer of poignant poetry on past Outkast classics, Big Rube has a wonderful outpouring of somber-but-sweet rhymes that chime along with the bittersweet beat he laments over.

    “Like a single blade of grass pushin through the cracked concrete,
    I establish my roots by attempting to accomplish some feat”

    “You in this jungle, gotta by humble, I’m just a mouse amongst the elephants”

    5/5

    11. I Gotta Know
    prod by Kevlaar 7
    performed by Salute the Kid, Phillie, Bronze, Illah Dayz

    The repeating sample to close out the previous track leads nicely into the opening here, a clicking of the beat that conjures that sound of someone trying to spark a BIC lighter. When the flame is lit it illuminates a massively spacious atmosphere announced by the reverberating bass sneaking immediately into the track.

    This is another track that I had to listen to many times before I could catch on to its amazingness. I couldn’t quite comprehend the beat at first, there are so many various elements involved that it took me a few listens to perceive the coalescing harmony of all of them. I think that’s a testament to the elevated level of Kevlaar’s producing talents. This is a very complex beat and yet it is weaved together into a perfect melody played out over a heavily rolling bassline (I’m realizing that dope bassline is a specialty of his).

    I like every one of the four verses here, especially Phillie’s. It’s amazing how they connect their verses and deliveries with the tone in the beat (they do this many times on the album). The chorus took me time to get used to but I’m feeling it now that I can connect with the message, which is simply “All this effort I’m putting into this, I gotta know if anything’s gonna come out of it!?!”

    Initially this was a 4/5 for me but the more I vibe to this knockin beat, the more I love this track.

    5/5

    12. Listen to the Wisemen
    prod by Kevlaar 7
    performed by Minister Watson

    Suuuuuch an ill beat. And the sample selection is perfect (is that the Beatles?). Partly a trippy-sounding audio-hypnosis but partly just dope, bangin instruments and then Minister Watson. When I had this joint on in the car, my girlfriend commented that it sounded like a voicemail. “It’s a message,” I said only realizing the potential of what I was saying after I’d already said it. This is a message in the middle of the album but it’s not simply saying “listen to our music,” it’s an eloquent description of wisdom.

    5/5


    13. Panic in Vision Park
    prod by Bronze Nazareth
    performed by Bronze, Phillie, Kevlaar 7


    Among my favorite tracks on the album. The drum patterns are so creative, very original and LIVE sounding. Like “I Gotta Know,” there’s a lot going on in this beat and when its collective harmony hits you it is mesmerizing. Next to Corn Liquor Thoughts, this has to be Bronze’s best verse, he just totally spazzes out on here and laces the track with darts:


    Cut loose I’m worse than Noah’s flood waters
    Medusa’s daughters, travelin like assassin bullets into ya body cabinets


    Last line conjures Dali’s famous cabinet images:



    and then he follows it with this terrific one:

    “Amongst open-book rappers, there’s no chapters
    an urban worthless map drawn, saran wrap ya wack songs”

    then just keeps rolling on from there over this head-bopper.

    Phillie slows it down a bit too much although I love the line “go nuts in the club like my necklace BROKE.” After that, the beat drops for one of Kevlaar’s best lyrical outputs on the album:

    “It’s a gift and a curse, like nursing a dead flower
    back to life, I watch you grow then let you go until my final hour”

    Such an eloquent title for this track and I also love the poignant comedian quotes and crowd sounds. Really, really cool track. Perfect, creative jazz-hip hop fusion.

    5/5


    14. Do It Again
    prod by Supaa Maine
    performed by Bronze, Phillie, Salute, Kevlaar 7

    At first I was questioning why this track was even on the album, it’s the only outside production and kind of a simple beat. It’s definitely grown on me now though. Altogether with the saxophones and everything there’s more depth to the beat than you realize at first. It also perfectly fits the theme of the song as the pace of the beat conjures a woman’s orgasm and the lyrics are great here, I especially like Salute’s verse. Flowing with the song’s theme, notice the repetition of fluid and fountains in each verse.

    3.5/5


    15. Interlude: Toxic
    prod by Bronze

    We all been there…

    16. Makes Want a Shot
    prod by Bronze Nazareth
    performed by Salute, Bronze, Kevlaar 7

    Another joint whose dopeness I was apparently deaf to at first but has since grown on me. The beat’s not amazing, but the emcees KILL this one. Every verse is crazy dope, especially Bronze’s with the fast flow. Plenty of great samples, quotes, and effects too (like the earth belching on Kev’s verse).

    Overall, the album really has a nice flow and sequence to it and here we’re preparing to close it out with a few drinks.

    4/5

    17. Victorious Hoods ft Victorious, Planet Asia
    prod by Kevlaar 7
    performed by Illah Dayz, Salute, Phillie, Victorious, Planet Asia, Kevlaar 7 (on the chorus)

    Very celebratory, victorious feel to this one. Great beat with the bongo drums and live horns chiming in and a very memorable chorus. This joint to me feels like the victorious conclusion to the opening track, bringing in a couple dope underground dartsmiths (Planet Asia always murks shit) to the party, and they’re all toasting to the completion of this dope album.

    4/5

    18. Corn Liquor Thoughts
    produced by Bronze fuckin Nazareth
    performed by Salute, Bronze, Kevlaar 7, Phillie, June Megaladon

    I’ve been trying to think of another album that concludes with such an awesome song as this one…Supreme Clientele (Wu Banga 101)? No Said Date? Hard to think of another one.

    This is the grimiest, darkest, dirtiest track on the album and it’s arguably the best track on the entire album. The beat has a kind of smooth staggering pace like a drunk draggin himself home from the bar along the sidewalk at night. In his mind his thoughts, dreams, emotions fade in and out (the chopped voices you hear), occasionally he blacks out and the beat disappears completely. Those slurring guitar strings just sound like whiskey to me.

    Salute has many nice verses on the album but this is best, he sets off this low-rider banger perfectly: “torchin for the fortune, I could give a fuck about fame.” His lyrics and delivery create the image of jaguars or panthers pacing through grasslands, “let the youngest move wit the pack.”

    Bronze absolutely tears this mothafucker to shreds. “Pay me my advance in Colombian coke and watch me flip it like Dominique Dawes, swingin through bars like a coked-up sloth, math precise compass off” and then in the middle of his verse, the beat drops and he really does swing through like climbing monkey bars, trying to catch back on to the beat with each new line, “Rotate the flow straight.”

    Kevlaar sounds possessed, or like he’s been swiggin a flask before an assassination attempt: “Spin the cylinder, cyclical spitter: realer than lead spit at the White House pillars.” He’s thinking about pullin stings, flippin your boat like “Corey Smith shivers,” and once again (just like the title track) he’s got one of the best single lines on the whole album: “Impossible, I sell popsicles in hell…hungry niggas, yall I’m ringin the dinner bell.”

    When I heard Phillie’s part at first I thought he took a wrong turn somewhere since he’s swaggin on a dark track but I realized he’s embodying the track’s theme because it’s undeniable that he sounds shitfaced, just braggin away but he’s in PERFECT harmony with the beat. June Mega, in his sole appearance on the album (besides his story on track 5), closes it out nicely with that ominous style of a swimming shark.

    5/5

    19. Outro: Hip Hop Blues
    prod by Kevlaar 7

    Great ending to a great album. Another dope beat (seriously heavy drums) over words that sum up the this crew’s genre.

    5/5


    Overall this album is loaded with heavy bass (thanks to Kevlaar), dope drum patterns, and a boatload of fresh instruments (horns, saxophones, guitars, pianos, chopped-up voice samples) all backing up some sharp, precise lyricism. This is undoubtedly a lot more polished than the first album, they even successfully experiment with a few new techniques of bringing the beat in and out based on the content of certain bars. Intricate design and near-flawless execution. It’s hard for me to rate this one overall because I don’t want to be construed as being overzealous or biased since this is my favorite stuff. Based on the ratings I gave for each track (16 songs since I didn’t rate 3 of the skits) it’s 73.5 out of 80 which is basically a little more than 9 out of 10. I’ll say:

    Beats 4.5/5
    Lyrics 4.5/5
    Overall 9 out of 10


    best tracks (in no order):
    Corn Liquor Thoughts
    Lucy
    Children of a Lesser God
    Panic in Vision Park

    Last edited by the silencer; 01-16-2011 at 03:09 AM.

  8. #8
    PRODIGAL SUN dad's Avatar
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    nice review.

  9. #9
    Don't grab my jacket dunn Hollow Dartz's Avatar
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    LOL props on the review. LOL
    Only a few years ago Hip Hop purists may have felt superior listening to hard core while their less enlightened companions snacked on commercial rap. As Shaolin research began to point out the overwhelming benefits of raw production, true hip hop enthusiasts started turning back to traditional styles. Wu-Tang in particular, has been shown to myriad beneficial effects, from warding off ignorance and poverty to reducing the risk of incarceration and death.

  10. #10
    king disguised as beggar. the silencer's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Hollow Dartz View Post
    LOL props on the review. LOL
    hahaha i went all out on this one...

    you feelin this album more than the older stuff or nah?

  11. #11
    DIE AGELESS Kevlaar 7's Avatar
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    WOW. im humbled. i SWEAR this muthafucka "Silencer" be AT our studio sessions when we constructing these buildings....

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    Fan of the real JASPER BEARDLY's Avatar
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    this review has inspired me to listen to wisemen cds. i'm disappointed i haven't until now.

  13. #13

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    excellent review...this album shocked the fuck out of me and is a huge step up from their debut. really thorough analysis, silencer.

    Quote Originally Posted by Kevlaar 7 View Post
    WOW. im humbled. i SWEAR this muthafucka "Silencer" be AT our studio sessions when we constructing these buildings....
    dude you showed out on the production this time...where's the solo album?

  14. #14
    Wu Vatican beeboy's Avatar
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    dope review, and the album is an instant classic !!! word

  15. #15
    DIE AGELESS Kevlaar 7's Avatar
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    word up thank you for the props, Pandemic... utmost appreciation...I'm 96% done with my solo album, in fact i'm hitting the lab in the morning for an all day session tomorrow...Die ageless will be finished in the next few weeks fam, we have yet to secure a release date...stay tuned because EVERY album we release from here on out will be a step above the last...we here for GOOD...PEACE

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