01.01.2021

View Poll Results: Wu-Tang Chambermusic

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  • Classic

    18 14.29%
  • Superior

    45 35.71%
  • Banger

    37 29.37%
  • Good

    14 11.11%
  • Average

    7 5.56%
  • Mediocre

    1 0.79%
  • Wack

    4 3.17%
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Thread: Wu - Tang Chamber Music

  1. #106
    has a deathwish NaturalBornKilla's Avatar
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    would have been much better with the gza, method man, or masta killa on this cd.
    Pass the bone, kid pass the bone
    Let's get on this mission like Indiana Jones

  2. #107
    Veteran Member GhettoGnom's Avatar
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    I hope RZA realize how much better this has been recieved than some of his other new work, now from http://kevinnottingham.com/


    Wu-Tang Clan: Chamber Music



    Ominous string instruments. Bootleg kung fu movie samples. Wisdom cautiously spilling from the sealed lips of ancient martial arts masters. Sword strikes. Track titles like “Supreme Architecture” and “Kill Too Hard.” Yes! Just when autotune was declared war upon by the likes of King Jiggamayne, this secret second roundhouse to the loudmouth of rap wackness is released to the masses, and these legendary beasts from the east are unleashed to feast on beats that sound like they were saved from The Flood that almost crumbled The Dream. RZA is damn near the peak of his artistry once again. Pay attention, grasshoppers and hipsters.

    The first track naturally is called “Redemption” (peace to Mr. X-citement). Then comes the majestic horns. And then comes some intriguingly relevant vocal samples speaking hip hop history through kung fu commentary. Gotta love it:“It was long ago, but he’s never forgotten that day. nd you’re his only hope to redeem the Clan, and retrieve our army!” “When you learn, you’ll know not to make those mistakes.”
    Inspectah Deck rips open the guts of the album, refreshingly sticking to his pistols, instead of trying to keep up with the young guns. Not “For Heaven’s Sake” level, but flashbacks of “the Lone Ranger/ code red: DANGER!” MC that we first fell in love with. It’s been a long time. Wu shouldn’t have left you. Yes, 8 Diagrams wasn’t exactly what most people were looking for, but if you are the kind of head who seeks the vintage sound of the Supreme Shaolin Ceremony Masters of the 90’s, then your wish has been officially granted by the RZArecta. Brooklyn soul band The Revelations also flesh out the fuzzy and dusty but digital grit whipped up in the pyrex pot of Prince Rakeem, embellishing each track with live instrumentation that does nothing but make everything sound much more authentic and fucking awesome. Andrew Kelley, Noah Rubin, and M.O.P.’s Lil’ Fame also provide soundscape support, with Fizzy Womack surprising the most of all, contributing to seven of the album’s seventeen sinister selections. It’s never really clear who actually does what, but it’s clear that what they are all doing collectively, is returning to the feel of the 36th Chamber like it is 1993 all over again, but not rehashing the rap madness that set it all off. They simply carry on tradition like super ninjas on a mission: save 2009 hip hop from bullshit. They succeed with flying colors and bloody shurikens.
    So, after Deck gets finished slicing the song open, a gruff ass U-God bodies the beat (I guess RZA and U-God worked that alleged unpaid debt situation out, thank goodness). Then Baby-U passes the mic to… Masta Ace? Ill. And even though Ace’s verse isn’t exactly mindblowing, it’s still lovely to hear these three veterans rhyme together over a moody organ riff and some chunky drums, radioplay be damned. We don’t need no hook, word to Shaq Diesel. Half the songs on this album don’t stop for an obvious refrain. Babies ain’t getting fed steak here; this is raw dog hip hop. Most of the songs aren’t longer than 3 minutes, but they are mostly filled with straight spitting. Suuu!
    Next up, Ghostface Killah, AZ, and The Rebel INS all jump on a party rocker together that finds Pretty Toney invigorated like it’s Ironman time again. Nice. But with him raising the energy bar that high, the subdued and laid back wordplay wizardry of Anthony Cruz doesn’t impress as much, only because Ghost Deini being amped on a track is usually the highlight, to the detriment of anyone else on the song. It works well enough, regardless. AZ is still a sick f*cking MC (that Nasir Escobar needs to make an album with). What’s more than enough is hearing Raekwon, Cormega and Sean Price get together to write a threatening lecture. Mega Montana in particular brings the vehicular homicidal rhyme drama:
    “Witness savages/ snitching was hazardous/ nowadays shit is embarrassing/ f*ck a flow, this is a lyrical aq..ue… duct”, with that stone jaw Queensbridge slur he spits his bulletproof rhymebook brilliance with. F*cking Corey. You rule. The rib-crushing bassline bobs and weaves in-between the slashing strings and Hollow Bones-huge gunshots that anchor the song to the ocean floor that is the dead rapper disposal for the bodies of the sh*t talkers and haters who doubted these living legends couldn’t still bring the motherf*ckin’ ruckus.
    “Cor/ Mega/ raw: forever/ fell back, paused/ fell off? NEVER” Blaow. Verse: dead. Song: murdered. What’s next? Sean Price, on the same beat? Too much awesome hip hop testosterone for one song. The line he walks between comedian and criminal is too edutaining to ever deny. “As you can see, I’m focused/ Boot Camp for life, f*ck the G.I. Joe sh*t”. Somewhere in the middle of the verse, P spits a syllable sandwich that only the best can manage to handle. Sh*t is magic.
    The Abbott interludes (like “Fatal Hesitation” and “One Last Question”, among others) are exactly what needs to be done to take this conceptual project from compilation to a remarkable creation. RZA shows that he knows exactly what time it is, even if he isn’t doing anything close to what the rest of the rap game is doing right now. It’s interesting to hear his take on various familiar things, like on “I Wish You Were Here”, where he filters the sample from Consequence and Kanye West’s “The Good, The Bad and The Ugly” for the most soulful slice of Wu-Tang street blues since Isaac Hayes blessed “I Can’t Go To Sleep” on the underloved classic The W. Soak it in, it’s marvelous.
    No GZA, Masta Killa or Method Man rhyme on Chamber Music unfortunately, but the rest of the fam is here. It will only leave us quenching more on a possible second edition of Chamber Music. Regardless, all members, some members, or no members, if you want that classic Wu-Tang Clan sh*t, it is right here, f*ck the world.
    Raekwon talks about his creative process before the meditative murda muzik of “Ill Figures” like the Kool Genius of Rap and Brownsville’s Finest, M.O.P.. There’s not much to say, the song is equal to the sum of its parts. Tons of guns.
    And straight up: “Free Like ODB” might be one of the best skits ever made. You gotta hear it. Repeatedly.
    Afterwards, Deck ignites the vocabularic havoc on the ground-rumbling “Sound The Horns,” but honestly, he needed to do a bit more editing before he sparked the lettering. His sword isn’t quite as sharp as it used to be, but even with a blunted edge, his words cut into the flesh of the track with conviction. Sadat X comes to life on the second verse and makes greatness out of his Wu collaboration. And Golden Arms perfectly finishes off the majestic massacre that the song moonlights as.
    “Enlightened Statues” finds RZA thinking very deeply on the different paths to enlightenment, and the costs of the fuel transporting your spirit from ignorance to elevation. The tabla playing textures and shifty percussion cloaks the snippet in open secrecy, as reverberations drip from RZA’s lisp, shrouding his spontaneous explanations in even more mystery. Almost every skit is somewhat structured like so, and it’s both frustrating and exciting to hear, as you know you won’t understand it all on the first few listens. But alternately, each one immediately connects something, and what you usually get is exceptional intellect.
    And before it’s all said and done, the disciples are blessed with a RZA solo called “NYC Crack.” A vocal sample as sweet as Blue Raspberry is stitched in between a trembling, countrified guitar lick and a hovering vibration of dark melody dread, as Robert Diggs updates us on the world according to RZA in 2009. “They only piggyback/ never disrespect/ that Wu-Tang slang is that New York City crack.” Indeed.
    The universal Buddha has spoken to the youth and the older gods living the truth. The 90’s was a special time, and assembling all these greats together under the Shaolin Island umbrella is a 2009 highlight to cherish and remember. Wu-Tang forever, motherf*ckers.
    The saga continues.
    88/100

    http://kevinnottingham.com/2009/07/2...chamber-music/


    Quote Originally Posted by CharlesJones
    I didn't like it because of the beats.

  3. #108
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    Quote Originally Posted by NaturalBornKilla View Post
    I have not listined to this cd yet
    Quote Originally Posted by NaturalBornKilla View Post
    would have been much better with the gza, method man, or masta killa on this cd.
    Listen to it first, then make judgement.

  4. #109

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    dude's soundin like a fag

  5. #110
    Wu Vatican
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pandemic View Post
    ^^^this wouldn't even fill up one side of a casette tape

    no replay value whatsoever

    anyone notice sultan and keelay disappeared once the album dropped?
    man i BEEN saying that Sultan faggot was only here to promote that shit.

  6. #111
    Veteran Member Rebel_INS's Avatar
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    Definitely a dope album, I really enjoyed it.

  7. #112
    Above the Clouds Surreptitious's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by NaturalBornKilla View Post
    would have been much better with the gza, method man, or masta killa on this cd.
    was superior without them but would have been a classic with them on it
    "The skywalker, that be leapin' over planets"

  8. #113

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    gubi snacks
    Last edited by Sultan Stringer; 08-29-2013 at 01:13 PM.

  9. #114
    king disguised as beggar. the silencer's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by GhettoGnom View Post
    I hope RZA realize how much better this has been recieved than some of his other new work, now from http://kevinnottingham.com/


    Wu-Tang Clan: Chamber Music



    Ominous string instruments. Bootleg kung fu movie samples. Wisdom cautiously spilling from the sealed lips of ancient martial arts masters. Sword strikes. Track titles like “Supreme Architecture” and “Kill Too Hard.” Yes! Just when autotune was declared war upon by the likes of King Jiggamayne, this secret second roundhouse to the loudmouth of rap wackness is released to the masses, and these legendary beasts from the east are unleashed to feast on beats that sound like they were saved from The Flood that almost crumbled The Dream. RZA is damn near the peak of his artistry once again. Pay attention, grasshoppers and hipsters.

    The first track naturally is called “Redemption” (peace to Mr. X-citement). Then comes the majestic horns. And then comes some intriguingly relevant vocal samples speaking hip hop history through kung fu commentary. Gotta love it:“It was long ago, but he’s never forgotten that day. nd you’re his only hope to redeem the Clan, and retrieve our army!” “When you learn, you’ll know not to make those mistakes.”
    Inspectah Deck rips open the guts of the album, refreshingly sticking to his pistols, instead of trying to keep up with the young guns. Not “For Heaven’s Sake” level, but flashbacks of “the Lone Ranger/ code red: DANGER!” MC that we first fell in love with. It’s been a long time. Wu shouldn’t have left you. Yes, 8 Diagrams wasn’t exactly what most people were looking for, but if you are the kind of head who seeks the vintage sound of the Supreme Shaolin Ceremony Masters of the 90’s, then your wish has been officially granted by the RZArecta. Brooklyn soul band The Revelations also flesh out the fuzzy and dusty but digital grit whipped up in the pyrex pot of Prince Rakeem, embellishing each track with live instrumentation that does nothing but make everything sound much more authentic and fucking awesome. Andrew Kelley, Noah Rubin, and M.O.P.’s Lil’ Fame also provide soundscape support, with Fizzy Womack surprising the most of all, contributing to seven of the album’s seventeen sinister selections. It’s never really clear who actually does what, but it’s clear that what they are all doing collectively, is returning to the feel of the 36th Chamber like it is 1993 all over again, but not rehashing the rap madness that set it all off. They simply carry on tradition like super ninjas on a mission: save 2009 hip hop from bullshit. They succeed with flying colors and bloody shurikens.
    So, after Deck gets finished slicing the song open, a gruff ass U-God bodies the beat (I guess RZA and U-God worked that alleged unpaid debt situation out, thank goodness). Then Baby-U passes the mic to… Masta Ace? Ill. And even though Ace’s verse isn’t exactly mindblowing, it’s still lovely to hear these three veterans rhyme together over a moody organ riff and some chunky drums, radioplay be damned. We don’t need no hook, word to Shaq Diesel. Half the songs on this album don’t stop for an obvious refrain. Babies ain’t getting fed steak here; this is raw dog hip hop. Most of the songs aren’t longer than 3 minutes, but they are mostly filled with straight spitting. Suuu!
    Next up, Ghostface Killah, AZ, and The Rebel INS all jump on a party rocker together that finds Pretty Toney invigorated like it’s Ironman time again. Nice. But with him raising the energy bar that high, the subdued and laid back wordplay wizardry of Anthony Cruz doesn’t impress as much, only because Ghost Deini being amped on a track is usually the highlight, to the detriment of anyone else on the song. It works well enough, regardless. AZ is still a sick f*cking MC (that Nasir Escobar needs to make an album with). What’s more than enough is hearing Raekwon, Cormega and Sean Price get together to write a threatening lecture. Mega Montana in particular brings the vehicular homicidal rhyme drama:
    “Witness savages/ snitching was hazardous/ nowadays shit is embarrassing/ f*ck a flow, this is a lyrical aq..ue… duct”, with that stone jaw Queensbridge slur he spits his bulletproof rhymebook brilliance with. F*cking Corey. You rule. The rib-crushing bassline bobs and weaves in-between the slashing strings and Hollow Bones-huge gunshots that anchor the song to the ocean floor that is the dead rapper disposal for the bodies of the sh*t talkers and haters who doubted these living legends couldn’t still bring the motherf*ckin’ ruckus.
    “Cor/ Mega/ raw: forever/ fell back, paused/ fell off? NEVER” Blaow. Verse: dead. Song: murdered. What’s next? Sean Price, on the same beat? Too much awesome hip hop testosterone for one song. The line he walks between comedian and criminal is too edutaining to ever deny. “As you can see, I’m focused/ Boot Camp for life, f*ck the G.I. Joe sh*t”. Somewhere in the middle of the verse, P spits a syllable sandwich that only the best can manage to handle. Sh*t is magic.
    The Abbott interludes (like “Fatal Hesitation” and “One Last Question”, among others) are exactly what needs to be done to take this conceptual project from compilation to a remarkable creation. RZA shows that he knows exactly what time it is, even if he isn’t doing anything close to what the rest of the rap game is doing right now. It’s interesting to hear his take on various familiar things, like on “I Wish You Were Here”, where he filters the sample from Consequence and Kanye West’s “The Good, The Bad and The Ugly” for the most soulful slice of Wu-Tang street blues since Isaac Hayes blessed “I Can’t Go To Sleep” on the underloved classic The W. Soak it in, it’s marvelous.
    No GZA, Masta Killa or Method Man rhyme on Chamber Music unfortunately, but the rest of the fam is here. It will only leave us quenching more on a possible second edition of Chamber Music. Regardless, all members, some members, or no members, if you want that classic Wu-Tang Clan sh*t, it is right here, f*ck the world.
    Raekwon talks about his creative process before the meditative murda muzik of “Ill Figures” like the Kool Genius of Rap and Brownsville’s Finest, M.O.P.. There’s not much to say, the song is equal to the sum of its parts. Tons of guns.
    And straight up: “Free Like ODB” might be one of the best skits ever made. You gotta hear it. Repeatedly.
    Afterwards, Deck ignites the vocabularic havoc on the ground-rumbling “Sound The Horns,” but honestly, he needed to do a bit more editing before he sparked the lettering. His sword isn’t quite as sharp as it used to be, but even with a blunted edge, his words cut into the flesh of the track with conviction. Sadat X comes to life on the second verse and makes greatness out of his Wu collaboration. And Golden Arms perfectly finishes off the majestic massacre that the song moonlights as.
    “Enlightened Statues” finds RZA thinking very deeply on the different paths to enlightenment, and the costs of the fuel transporting your spirit from ignorance to elevation. The tabla playing textures and shifty percussion cloaks the snippet in open secrecy, as reverberations drip from RZA’s lisp, shrouding his spontaneous explanations in even more mystery. Almost every skit is somewhat structured like so, and it’s both frustrating and exciting to hear, as you know you won’t understand it all on the first few listens. But alternately, each one immediately connects something, and what you usually get is exceptional intellect.
    And before it’s all said and done, the disciples are blessed with a RZA solo called “NYC Crack.” A vocal sample as sweet as Blue Raspberry is stitched in between a trembling, countrified guitar lick and a hovering vibration of dark melody dread, as Robert Diggs updates us on the world according to RZA in 2009. “They only piggyback/ never disrespect/ that Wu-Tang slang is that New York City crack.” Indeed.
    The universal Buddha has spoken to the youth and the older gods living the truth. The 90’s was a special time, and assembling all these greats together under the Shaolin Island umbrella is a 2009 highlight to cherish and remember. Wu-Tang forever, motherf*ckers.
    The saga continues.
    88/100

    http://kevinnottingham.com/2009/07/2...chamber-music/
    that was a pretty damn well-written review, WOW

  10. #115
    Don't grab my jacket dunn Hollow Dartz's Avatar
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    1. Redemption

    2.Kill Too Hard (Featuring Masta Ace)

    I'm feeling the opening verse by Inspectah Deck on here, he starts this off just ripping the mic easily dusting off his sword. The Beat on here is cool, nothing spectacular but nice enough, you can hear how they try to take it back on here with the beat. U-God comes in and sounds like he's fresh off 8 Diagrams, I like his flow control and his lyrics are sharp as fuck. Masta Ace rips this shit with no problem a great guest appearance by him, this is a nice track to start the EP off. 4/5

    3.The Abbot
    Rza making up excuses for himself.

    4.Harbor Masters (Featuring AZ)
    This beat really tries to take it back, it's pretty good too, I'm feeling the drums on here, they sound dusty. Ghostface Killah is sound fresh on here with some nice rhymes out the book, AZ adds that extra flavor on this track, there's not much more they could've done with this beat. Inspectah Deck's opening bars are HORRIBLE by Wu-Tang Standards "I'm about to get fly like I'm boarding a jet" straight wack, I hate listening to that, he easily picks himself back up after those lines and ends the track nice and smooth. 4/5


    5.Sheep State

    6.Radiant Jewels (Featuring Cormega & Sean Price)
    This is one of the best IF NOT the best song on the cd. The beat is nice not too calm not too hype and it doesn't try to sound 90's at all. Raekwon starts it off with his mafioso tales keeping you involved on here, he was just the appetizer though. Cormega just destoys this track, this is the best guest verse on this EP, he just says shit that makes you say wtf?? I will be buying his new shit when he decides to drop it. Sean Price ends it nice but your still feeling the after effects of Cormega's verse, not to take anything away from Sean Price's verse because he did rip it, Cormega destroyed it. 4.5/5


    7.Supreme Architecture

    8.Evil Deeds (Featuring Havoc)
    This gets a 4 just off the beat alone, it's just so beautiful especially when the hook comes in. Ghostface Smahsed this beat, he went off on this one "give you an 89' whoopin'" LOL Ghost just starts going off towards the end of this track, he definitely still has his dartz sharp. Rza comes in on the hook and I won't lie, he sounds suspect but it does come out better than I thought it would, only because he's flowing with it, His verse wasn't anything special, he does have that one hot line "my moms put gun powder inside my cimilac" LOL that was nice, his flow sounds choppy which hurts his verse a lil' bit. Havoc kills this shit right here, I like how he just acknowledges Ghostface like Rza isn't on the track, He spits some nice shit, his twitter line is my favorite "I ain't with that Twitter shit, niggaz tryna follow me" so true, just look at these people out here on twitter just itching to know what someone's doing. Anyways back to the song, I like how this was put together, almost flawless, I would've through Raekwon on here instead. 4.5/5


    9. Wise Men

    10. I Wish You Were Here
    This is basically a preview of the new Ghost album, it's ok nothing too special, too much singing for me at the end of the verse which is a turn off for me. 3.5/5

    11.Fatal Hesitation

    12.Ill Figures (Featuring M.O.P. & Kool G Rap)
    I'm feeling this track right here, nice and calm, everyone goes well with each other on here. I'm feeling how Raekwon just kills this verse, with his calm flow, M.O.P. deliver stellar verses and keep the track raw, I like how Kool G Rap kinda goes with Raekwon and keeps it calm on here just flowing on here, I fucks with that. Beat is nice and calm One of my favorite tracks on the album. 4/5

    13.Free Like ODB


    14.Sound The Horns (Featuring Sadat X)
    I'm feeling the up tempo on this track, Horns are great on here, Inspectah Deck starts this off nice with the ill dartz, I'm feeling Sadat X voice and choppy flow on here, it just goes great with this beat "G.O.D. yeah how you gonna block out the sun?" LOL that's my favorite line, U-God's verse sounds like some Dopium material, sounds ok. Nice way to end this one off. 4/5


    15.Enlighten Statues

    16.NYC Crack (Featuring Thea)
    This is an ok track, judging by this track I wouldn't buy another Rza solo, there's nothing really special about this track and Thea is on it sounding horrible as ususal. Beat sounds grimey which is the best part. 3.5/5

    17.One Last Question

    Pros: Great Guest Spots, they all deliver some great verses MVP goes to cormega of course, Beats are pretty good too, keeps this album sounding kind of raw.

    Cons: Too many tracks with Rza talking and not enough actual tracks to even call this an album, that's why I used EP throughout my review, also Meth & Masta Killah would've been nice to hear on this.

    Beats: 4/5
    Lyrics: 4/5
    Overall: 4/5




    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.

  11. #116

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    Quote Originally Posted by Hollow Dartz View Post


    16.NYC Crack (Featuring Thea)
    This is an ok track, judging by this track I wouldn't buy another Rza solo, there's nothing really special about this track and Thea is on it sounding horrible as ususal. Beat sounds grimey which is the best part. 3.5/5
    This is stupid. Stupid lame excuses for hating. Stupid spelling mistakes. (grimy, usual) Stupid logic. I expected nothing less.

  12. #117
    Don't grab my jacket dunn Hollow Dartz's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by beautifulrock View Post
    This is stupid. Stupid lame excuses for hating. Stupid spelling mistakes. (grimy, usual) Stupid logic. I expected nothing less.
    Uh Oh, someone's still mad about getting put in their place last month. Anyways so what if i made spelling errors, it happens and I don't like Thea, the track isn't all that hot anyway. I wouldn't call it hating.
    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.

  13. #118

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    i'm not trying to be insulting or disrespectful, but your reviews are amateurishly written and lack any real insight. I mean 'i fucks wit that' 'this track is ok' or 'this shit is wack' is not even worth typing. you should ditch the track-by-track review format and just write a paragraph with your overall impressions; you might be better at that honestly.

  14. #119
    RaizaBlade Durag's Avatar
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    I thought this album was good, the skits were a waste of time, they should have made it an ep as an appitser or something coz there really isnt enough songs to constitue a full album. the songs that are on it are dope though.

    and yeah, track by track reviews are gay.

  15. #120
    Don't grab my jacket dunn Hollow Dartz's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pandemic View Post
    i'm not trying to be insulting or disrespectful, but your reviews are amateurishly written and lack any real insight. I mean 'i fucks wit that' 'this track is ok' or 'this shit is wack' is not even worth typing. you should ditch the track-by-track review format and just write a paragraph with your overall impressions; you might be better at that honestly.
    I can respect that, but this is my usual format, most people here like it, If you want to look at a paragraph check out Sheepish Lord of Chaos, he's good with those. I just prefer track by track review.
    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.

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