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Cannibal Ox - Cold Vein (CD)

Cold Vein
$9.90 - $15.98
4.5 out of 5.0 stars 4 Ratings (5 Reviews)

Album Details: Cold Vein

Release Date:05/15/2001
Label:Definitive Jux
UPC:600308882423

Other Available Formats: Cold Vein

User Reviews: Cold Vein

  • Overall:

    dope stuff!

    By jerrrobi  Nov 13, 2002

    the beats are off the wall! el p makes beats as is he was a scientist. shamar and vast aire are tight, though vast aire dominates the album more. you gotta get this cd!

  • Overall:

    Cold Vein

    By Eric H.  Dec 12, 2001

    If you want to hear hip-hop done right, I plead with you to pick up this album. The best hip-hop album you'll hear all year. End of debate. El-P makes music out of celestial monk chants, organs, metallic synths, barbed beats - the whole thing just ha...s this shimmering gloriousness to it but instead of that whole R&B sample loop stuff, it has a visceral razor edge to it. Puts everything out there to shame. Vast Aire and Vordul are great MCs, their raps revolve around the enviornment of the inner city but also deal honestly with love and drugs. Trust me, pick this up and you will never be able to see other hip-hop in the same light again. If you are a long time hip-hop head, then you should be ashamed for not having this. But if you're looking for creative original hip-hop aside from all the MTV crap, then pick this up for an introduction to Cannibal Ox's cold world. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Cold Vein

  • All Music Guide

    While it can be said that many underground crews have been floundering in the gray matter of indie hip-hop, Cannibal Ox filled that area in with 2001's The Cold Vein for El P's Def Jux imprint. The music press had been quick to point out that Vast Aire and Vordul Megilah's attack is at times highly derivative of the Wu Tang Clan, and the point is valid. Thankfully, El P (a serious candidate for producer of the year) lays out some of the most lushingly intriguing sounds and beats that feel as herky-jerky as they sound gilded with silk. It's a bit misleading to harp on the Wu factor that The Cold Vein contains since this record's content is immensely original and the Wu references that seem present are in the enlightened gloomy flow and psychedelic backdrops -- not, (with all due respect) in the kitschy hooks and unfocused rhymes that Wu Tang are also known for. Aire and Megilah swirl around in b-boy posturing and obtuse nonsense as their innovation rears its head at every corner with sc...atter-shot lines like: "And I ain't dealin' with no minimum wage/I'd rather construct rhymes on a minimum page," and "You were a still-born baby, your mother didn't want you but you were still-born." While there's not a throwaway track per se, the album's length does run a bit long (at least they didn't make it into a double CD as a lot of rap acts have been known to do). To their immense credit, Cannibal Ox and El P have assembled one of the most listenable hip-hop albums in far too long. Headz be aware: Independent hip-hop has a new voice and this is your beat fix for 2001. - Jack LV Isles, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Cannibal Ox

As hip-hop became increasingly commercial and calculated in the late '90s, a thriving indie scene began developing in response, one of the more significant artists in that underground scene being Cannibal Ox. The Harlem duo -- Vast Aire and Vordul Megilah -- eschewed the trademark late-'90s "Cash, Money, Hoes"/"Bling, Bling" style in favor of an edgier approach that con... Read more