![]() Thefreehoudini Deluxe $8.99 Seriously, this is the reason I love hip hop. Underground artists like this continue to flourish with new sounding material. Part mix tape, part distribution prospect, nothing short of a Brilliant return for Anticon's 'themselves'. Lyrically, Dos and Jel kill it while cutthroat break beats synthetically spill over electronica music. And with Amazing guests like Def Jux elite Aesop Rock, who's style fuses perfectly with the music here, and Anticon's very own Sole and Sage Francis; any hip hop fan will want to cop this! Free version is in mixtape form with all songs under one track. On the retail version you get bonus tracks which are all sick, plus the songs are released on seperate tracks. Available for under $9 including shipping at Anticon's online shop. This is your best value for 20 songs, and you pay the artist directly! ![]() Thefreehoudini $10.98 Seriously, this is the reason I love hip hop. Underground artists like this continue to flourish with new sounding material. Part mix tape, part distribution prospect, nothing short of a Brilliant return for Anticon's 'themselves'. Lyrically, Dos and Jel kill it while cutthroat break beats synthetically spill over electronica music. And with Amazing guests like Def Jux elite Aesop Rock, who's style fuses perfectly with the music here, and Anticon's very own Sole and Sage Francis; any hip hop fan will want to cop this! Free version is in mixtape form with all songs under one track. On the retail version you get bonus tracks which are all sick, plus the songs are released on seperate tracks. Available for under $9 including shipping at Anticon's online shop. This is your best value for 20 songs, and you pay the artist directly! ![]() Crownsdown $16.98 Seven months after the release of theFREEhoudini--the celebrated mixtape that announced Themselves' return--Doseone and Jel drop CrownsDown, a careful and vicious exhibition of mastered rap tactics and sampling ethics. Themselves' third album proper has been gestating in the gut of this seminal group for some time. It's both a return to form and a honing of what's come before (Subtle, cLOUDDEAD, Deep Puddle)--both the opus that these lionhearted two were always meant to make, and the album that their hip-hop-obsessed teenaged selves always hoped to hear. On CrownsDown, Themselves weld brute skill to a concrete set of tracks that represents an essential ten commandments of rap. In preparation, Doseone and Jel revisited their beloved hip-hop collections (e.g. Gang Starr, Ultramagnetic MCs, Public Enemy, Saafir) and whittled down the recurring themes that made their favorite records so sturdy. Each song on CrownsDown represents one of these archetypes--there's the don't bite song, the diss track, the story rap, the bootleggers beware song, and the don't f with my DJ jam, and more. In this way, Themselves revisit something classic in order to invent their own future-school entry to the annals. Naturally, things kick off with Back II Burn, a guess who's back track (co-written by Pedestrian) that bangs forth on good ol' fashioned synth hits and heavy thump. Oversleeping follows with a Bomb Squad-style sampler salvo and a whirlwind of rhyme that reference-checks lyrics from both Nas and Subtle. Next up is The Mark, wherein Dose cautions would-be style thieves, while borrowing his own cadence from Ultramag-era Kool Keith. Gangster of Disbelief finds Dose dropping science (the fourth archetype) in a rich baritone atop eerie production that harkens back to his and Jel's debut. Daxstrong takes on the spread-love model, paying proper tribute to Subtle founder Dax Pierson, left paraplegic after the sextet's 2005 tour accident. Bandmates Jordan Dalrymple and Markus Acher (13 & God, The Notwist) join Dose for an end-song sing-along. You Ain't It features an auto-tuned guest spot from Pierson himself, playing the melodic foil to Dose's jagged and rapid fire words. On Gold Teeth Will Roll, crux of CrownsDown, Dose casts Themselves in the final archetype: righteous defenders of the culture. This sentiment cuts to the core of the album. In carving out their own classic, Doseone and Jel not only aim to topple those wrongly kinged, but lay down their own sweat-and-blood-made crowns at the feet of that which they admire most. ![]() Crownsdown $14.98 Seven months after the release of theFREEhoudini--the celebrated mixtape that announced Themselves' return--Doseone and Jel drop CrownsDown, a careful and vicious exhibition of mastered rap tactics and sampling ethics. Themselves' third album proper has been gestating in the gut of this seminal group for some time. It's both a return to form and a honing of what's come before (Subtle, cLOUDDEAD, Deep Puddle)--both the opus that these lionhearted two were always meant to make, and the album that their hip-hop-obsessed teenaged selves always hoped to hear. On CrownsDown, Themselves weld brute skill to a concrete set of tracks that represents an essential ten commandments of rap. In preparation, Doseone and Jel revisited their beloved hip-hop collections (e.g. Gang Starr, Ultramagnetic MCs, Public Enemy, Saafir) and whittled down the recurring themes that made their favorite records so sturdy. Each song on CrownsDown represents one of these archetypes--there's the don't bite song, the diss track, the story rap, the bootleggers beware song, and the don't f with my DJ jam, and more. In this way, Themselves revisit something classic in order to invent their own future-school entry to the annals. Naturally, things kick off with Back II Burn, a guess who's back track (co-written by Pedestrian) that bangs forth on good ol' fashioned synth hits and heavy thump. Oversleeping follows with a Bomb Squad-style sampler salvo and a whirlwind of rhyme that reference-checks lyrics from both Nas and Subtle. Next up is The Mark, wherein Dose cautions would-be style thieves, while borrowing his own cadence from Ultramag-era Kool Keith. Gangster of Disbelief finds Dose dropping science (the fourth archetype) in a rich baritone atop eerie production that harkens back to his and Jel's debut. Daxstrong takes on the spread-love model, paying proper tribute to Subtle founder Dax Pierson, left paraplegic after the sextet's 2005 tour accident. Bandmates Jordan Dalrymple and Markus Acher (13 & God, The Notwist) join Dose for an end-song sing-along. You Ain't It features an auto-tuned guest spot from Pierson himself, playing the melodic foil to Dose's jagged and rapid fire words. On Gold Teeth Will Roll, crux of CrownsDown, Dose casts Themselves in the final archetype: righteous defenders of the culture. This sentiment cuts to the core of the album. In carving out their own classic, Doseone and Jel not only aim to topple those wrongly kinged, but lay down their own sweat-and-blood-made crowns at the feet of that which they admire most. |
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