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Hip Hop Is Dead

Nas - Hip Hop Is Dead

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  4 Ratings (1 Reviews)

Track List: Hip Hop Is Dead

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  1. Money Over Bullsh*t
  2. You Can't Kill Me
  3. Carry On Tradition
  4. Where Are They Now
  5. Hip Hop Is Dead
  6. Who Killed It?
  7. Black Republican
  8. Not Going Back
  9. Still Dreaming
  10. Hold Down The Block
  11. Blunt Ashes
  12. Let There Be Light
  13. Play On Playa
  14. Can't Forget About You
  15. Hustlers
  16. Hope

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Album Details: Hip Hop Is Dead

Release Date:
12/19/2006
Label:
Def Jam
UPC:
602517028296

User Reviews: Hip Hop Is Dead

  1. Best Album 2006

    , February 9, 2007
    Reviewer: Top 1000 Reviewers mug_brandon - See all mug_brandon's reviews
    Overall:   
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read all (1) user reviews for Hip Hop Is Dead 

Pro Reviews: Hip Hop Is Dead

EXPERT RATING:   

From AMG Reviews

Hip Hop Is Dead is not Illmatic. Illmatic stands as one of the most impressive debuts in rap music, and consequently has set up inevitable, and often unfavorable, comparisons with each of Nas' subsequent releases. And so it is practically a given that the two albums in fact do not compare, that the beats, the rhymes, the insight, the flow Mr. Jones had on Illmatic have not been duplicated here, and in all honestly, probably never will. Nas himself seems aware of this though he would never admit it as throughout the record he references the MCs, the producers, the DJs who made the music what it was and what it is today, many of whom were releasing material in the early '90s, when Nas first made a mark. He himself is one of them.

The statement that "hip hop is dead" is clearly meant to be controversial, and was, as rappers and rap fans alike exploded into debate after Nas declared it to be the title of his next album. But it's also a statement that the MC doesn't completely adhere to. He flipflops between declaring that it has already gone, to warning of its imminent departure, to promising "to carry on tradition," to resurrecting it. But these inconsistencies don't come from contradictions in Nas' beliefs; rather, they stem from the fact that his biggest problem with hiphop has nothing to do with current talent, but what hiphop itself has become how it's magnified from an art form, from a way the ghetto expressed itself, into a commercialized, corporate entity that Nas himself is part of, something about which he feels more than a little guilty. This is most openly addressed on "Black Republican," which appropriately features an equally guilty (in terms of both improving and commercializing rap music) JayZ, who spits out better lines than anything he did on Kingdom Come. The track, which ingeniously samples "Marcia Religiosa" from The Godfather II (a film that, in many ways, parallels Nas' ideas about hiphop as it deals with the dark side of making money and the problems that befall an overly zealous pursuit of the always crafty American Dream), finds both MCs lamenting the state of the genre while also acknowledging their own participation and enjoyment of what it's given them. "Black Republican" is an understanding and admittance of hypocrisy, and this sentiment continues in "Not Going Back" and "Carry on Tradition," the latter in which Nas rhymes, "We used to be a ghetto secret/Can't make my mind up if I want that/Or the whole world to peep it." Nas enjoys the fame, but he also realizes that it has hurt the very thing he loves most, his "first wifey."



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Nas Biography

Heralded instantly as one of New York's leading rap voices, Nas expressed an outspoken, self-empowered swagger that rallied the streets of his city and elsewhere. Whether proclaiming himself "Nasty Nas" or "Nas Escobar" or "Nastradamus" or "God's Son...Full Nas Biography

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