Categorias:
Carrinho de compras 0

Serviço indisponível no momento.

KRS-One|Maximum Strength 2008

Maximum Strength 2008

Krs One

Disponível em
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Estéreo

Streaming ilimitado

Escute agora este álbum em alta qualidade nos nossos aplicativos

Iniciar meu período de teste e começar a escutar este álbum

Curta este álbum nos aplicativos Qobuz com a sua assinatura

Assinar

Curta este álbum nos aplicativos Qobuz com a sua assinatura

Idioma disponível: inglês

From the opening barks "I know we ain't getting' soft!" over the stripped-down piano and drum production of "Beware," it's evident that KRS-One has been reevaluating his sound, and is responding to criticism with fire. The teacher's back and class is in session. After several lackluster releases, in which Blastmaster Chris obsessed over the state of hip-hop and spent his time pointing fingers at other rappers for not bringing it, Maximum Strength shows him at his maximum strength and doing what he does best: preaching. As the first KRS One album with a real sense of purpose in years, nearly every track focuses on the beefs he has with politics and society. This is the educator at his purest. He pulls no stops as he rifles through his rhyme book, dropping lines like "take a look at the police and how they treat you/ take a look at corporations and how they cheat you/ democrats and republicans are all see through/ now we votin' for the lesser of two evils, man, don't let them deceive you/ this is an autocracy not a democracy/ but to call this a democracy without mock interest in the laws of society, that's called hypocracy." He continues waxing political in "Pick It Up," breaking open the European history textbooks to provide a background on the last time a true democracy was practiced: by Cleisthenese in 508 BC before Athens was conquered by Alexander of Macedon. Thought-provoking raps like these seem like luxuries when compared to the typical flash in the pan party raps that are embraced by radio stations, which encourage listeners to throw their hands in the air rather than pushing core values. Kris preaches unity in the community and loving your sister, but also knows when to lighten up and reminisce about the good times with party raps of his own. "Let Me Know" shows him spitting rhymes with the finesse and lyrical prowess of Busta Rhymes over a dancehall jam, and "Straight Through" shows him furiously speeding through B-boy topics without taking a breath. At the worst moments, "New York" and "Hip Hop" suffer slightly, scarred by scatting female vocals and dated production, but for a middle-aged rapper at this stage in the game, it's surprisingly relevant and not only one of the better hip-hop releases he's dropped in years, but one of the best of his career.
© Jason Lymangrover /TiVo

Mais informações

Maximum Strength 2008

KRS-One

launch qobuz app Já baixei o Qobuz para Windows / MacOS Abrir

download qobuz app Ainda não baixei o Qobuz para Windows / MacOS Baixar o aplicativo Qobuz

Você está escutando amostras.

Escute mais de 100 milhões de músicas com um plano de streaming ilimitado.

Escute esta playlist e mais de 100 milhões de músicas com os nossos planos de streaming ilimitado.

A partir de R$ 21,60/mês

1
Beware Explicit
00:03:46

KRS One, MainArtist

2008 IN THE PAINT 2008 IN THE PAINT

2
Pick It Up Explicit
00:03:41

KRS One, MainArtist

2008 IN THE PAINT 2008 IN THE PAINT

3
All My Men Explicit
00:02:47

KRS One, MainArtist

2008 IN THE PAINT 2008 IN THE PAINT

4
Straight Through Explicit
00:03:13

KRS One, MainArtist

2008 IN THE PAINT 2008 IN THE PAINT

5
Rockin' Til The Morning Explicit
00:03:10

KRS One, MainArtist

2008 IN THE PAINT 2008 IN THE PAINT

6
The Kool Herc Explicit
00:01:07

KRS One, MainArtist

2008 IN THE PAINT 2008 IN THE PAINT

7
Busy Bee Shout Out Explicit
00:00:15

KRS One, MainArtist

2008 IN THE PAINT 2008 IN THE PAINT

8
New York Explicit
00:03:27

KRS One, MainArtist

2008 IN THE PAINT 2008 IN THE PAINT

9
Hip Hop Explicit
00:03:30

KRS One, MainArtist

2008 IN THE PAINT 2008 IN THE PAINT

10
Let Me Know Explicit
00:02:31

KRS One, MainArtist

2008 IN THE PAINT 2008 IN THE PAINT

11
Nah Explicit
00:03:38

KRS One, MainArtist

2008 IN THE PAINT 2008 IN THE PAINT

12
The Heat Explicit
00:02:09

KRS One, MainArtist

2008 IN THE PAINT 2008 IN THE PAINT

Resenha do Álbum

From the opening barks "I know we ain't getting' soft!" over the stripped-down piano and drum production of "Beware," it's evident that KRS-One has been reevaluating his sound, and is responding to criticism with fire. The teacher's back and class is in session. After several lackluster releases, in which Blastmaster Chris obsessed over the state of hip-hop and spent his time pointing fingers at other rappers for not bringing it, Maximum Strength shows him at his maximum strength and doing what he does best: preaching. As the first KRS One album with a real sense of purpose in years, nearly every track focuses on the beefs he has with politics and society. This is the educator at his purest. He pulls no stops as he rifles through his rhyme book, dropping lines like "take a look at the police and how they treat you/ take a look at corporations and how they cheat you/ democrats and republicans are all see through/ now we votin' for the lesser of two evils, man, don't let them deceive you/ this is an autocracy not a democracy/ but to call this a democracy without mock interest in the laws of society, that's called hypocracy." He continues waxing political in "Pick It Up," breaking open the European history textbooks to provide a background on the last time a true democracy was practiced: by Cleisthenese in 508 BC before Athens was conquered by Alexander of Macedon. Thought-provoking raps like these seem like luxuries when compared to the typical flash in the pan party raps that are embraced by radio stations, which encourage listeners to throw their hands in the air rather than pushing core values. Kris preaches unity in the community and loving your sister, but also knows when to lighten up and reminisce about the good times with party raps of his own. "Let Me Know" shows him spitting rhymes with the finesse and lyrical prowess of Busta Rhymes over a dancehall jam, and "Straight Through" shows him furiously speeding through B-boy topics without taking a breath. At the worst moments, "New York" and "Hip Hop" suffer slightly, scarred by scatting female vocals and dated production, but for a middle-aged rapper at this stage in the game, it's surprisingly relevant and not only one of the better hip-hop releases he's dropped in years, but one of the best of his career.
© Jason Lymangrover /TiVo

Sobre o álbum

Melhorar as informações do álbum
Mais sobre o Qobuz
Por KRS-One

I Got Next

KRS-One

I Got Next KRS-One

KRS-One

KRS-One

KRS-One KRS-One

50 More Years Of Hip Hop

KRS-One

KRS-One

KRS-One

KRS-One KRS-One

Return of the Boom Bap

KRS-One

Playlists

Você também pode gostar...

UTOPIA

Travis Scott

UTOPIA Travis Scott

WE DON'T TRUST YOU

Future

Graduation

Kanye West

Graduation Kanye West

HISS

Megan Thee Stallion

HISS Megan Thee Stallion

HISS

Megan Thee Stallion

HISS Megan Thee Stallion