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Release: | Phsychosocioghettopathic |
| | MyHHHdb | |
Media: | [Audio CD] [Audio Tape] | Released: | 1995 [ Listen to HHH from this era on Spotify ] |
Recordlabel: | Forefront |
Info: | 01. Behind enemy lines
02. Commin' to get you out
03. It's real
04. Little brother
05. Ain't nobody dyin' but us
06. Elevate your mind
07. Be a man
08. I.N.S. - Drop the clips
09. Let the truth set you free
10. Abstract reality
11. Momma's prayers
12. You're gettin' played
13. Truso - No pressure
14. The end times
15. She's the one
16. Yes Lord
17. Rise up
18. Yea, yea, yea
19. How we roll |
Rating: | Our users rated this release: 10 out of 10 (Number of votes: 1) Sign up or login to submit your vote |
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| Review: | Track Title BPM
1 Behind enemy lines 0
2 Commin' to get you out 93
3 It's real 93
4 Little brother 0
5 Ain't nobody dyin' but us 73
6 Elevate your mind 101
7 Be a man 83
8 I.N.S. - Drop the clips 82
9 Let the truth set you free 76
10 Abstract reality 81
11 Momma's prayers 91
12 You're gettin' played 95
13 Truso - No pressure 91
14 The end times 95
15 She's the one 90
16 Yes Lord 0
17 Rise up 69
18 Yea, yea, yea 93
19 How we roll 99 | | source: unknown, added: Feb 24, 2005 | |
Review: | This is like the 19 release or something from these guys and
through they seem to be getting a lot close I felt that this
one lacked something too, while they continue further into
that whole G-funk west coast thing they do try and switch
things up a bit mixing some R&B style stuff in some of the
tracks. One song reminded me a lot of the Ultramagnetic's
which was kinda cool cause I used to be real into them. I
guess if your hurtin' for some new rap to listen to this
one isn't bad buy, but overall I didn't listen to this one
too much. | | source: unknown, added: Feb 24, 2005 | |
Review: | On their fourth release, PsychoTheoSocioGhettoPathic [The
Escape] E.T.W. turns their rap/hip-hop music toward the hard
realities of life on the street. Their goal was to "comfort
the afflicted and afflict the comfortable," with respect to
inner-city life. They offer understanding to this audience,
taking a "'90's deliverance message" to those caught in
"'90's life." Clocking in barely under an hour, there
should be plenty to appeal to fans of hard rap to more
soulful hip-hop. | | source: TLeM, Internet, added: Feb 24, 2005 | |
Review: | De End Time Wariors waren het getreiter van satan beu en
genoodzaakt om uit hun dagelijkse functies te ontsnappen om
zo een meesterplan uit te denken en op CD te zetten. Ze
hebben hun stijlen en delivery verbeterd, een hele relaxte
West Coast stijl. Ze brengen hun rhymes met geboterde
stemmen en pakken de onderwerpen aan die in de ghetto's van
Amerika afspelen. Ze maken duidelijk dat er maar ‚‚n
oplossing is voor rasisme, tieners die zwanger zijn,
ganggeweld, criminaliteit, kinderen met wapens, enz. De
tracks bestaan uit rustige beats, weinig samples,
keyboarddeuntjes en instrumenten. De jazzinstrumenten zijn
de redenen dat de CD speciaal en origineel is. Zonder deze
zou de CD niet erg opvallen tussen andere CD's.
Live-instrumenten maken het geheel toch wat levender. Een
bekende naam van de instrumenten bespelers is Otto Price
(Gotee Night Out/GRitS) die de bas verzorgt. De baslijn is
erg zwaar en ruig. In diverse tracks komen er ook
soulzangeressen aan te pas om nog meer laid back te maken.
Een van de beste tracks vind ik 'You're Gettin Played'.
Hier zijn de beats wat dikker en minder relaxt. Het gaat
over gangbangers, criminelen, hustlers en players: "A
diabolical scheme who's next to get clowned? The devil took
your soul to pick you off from the playground. Nine-year-old
wannabee gangsta in a schoolyard. At eightteen you're doing
time in a prisonyard", een pittig onderwerp. Yep, hun
nieuwe CD is DopeHolyHipHoppusAlaWestCoastology. | | source: Rap&Roer Magazine #3, added: Feb 24, 2005 | |
Review: | out of all their recordings this is by far the best. the
others dont seem to have the power of this one- they just
basicly quote scripture and use cliches. but this is
different, it applies the scripture to real life
circumstances, giving it deeper meaning to an unsaved world.
sure cliches may work, but rap is a special unique vehicle
to minister to a specail group of people(and its more
conducive to describing real life issues not just tid bits
of truth) that more traditional methods(including cliches)
just do not work. the very best song of em all is it's
real. full of scripture during Johnnie williams turn, this
particualr song employs a style before its time,; it kind of
relates to say a KJ52 of today. | | source: unknown, added: Feb 10, 2007 | |
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