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P.A.I.N.T.

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Download links and information about P.A.I.N.T. by Abstract Rude. This album was released in 2001 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 01:12:26 minutes.

Artist: Abstract Rude
Release date: 2001
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Rap
Tracks: 18
Duration: 01:12:26
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $7.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Hey, This Must Be Deep 0:41
2. Yep! 4:06
3. Full Time Job 3:22
4. Ab Live At the Good Life Cafe '93 1:00
5. Stop Biting 4:39
6. Heavyweights Round 4 (feat. Freestyle Fellowship, Ellay Khule, Volume 10, Busdriver & Medusa) 8:40
7. Birds of a Feather 4:24
8. Dawning of the A.G.E. (feat. The Grouch & Eligh) 4:20
9. Owls and Roosters 3:52
10. Frisbee (feat. Slug & Eyedea) 5:54
11. Killafornia to the Belly 3:39
12. Abstract Rude Interlude 0:48
13. Brothers Forever 5:15
14. M-A-Double S (feat. DK Toon, Awol One & Smooth 7) 3:21
15. She's Always Right (feat. Moka Only) 4:13
16. Sun Sets On Em 4:20
17. Family Affair 5:28
18. A Coat of Paint (Finale) 4:24

Details

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Following the release of Code Name: Scorpion, a collaboration with fellow Battle Axe artist Moka Only, Abstract Rude's first legitimate solo LP gathers other prominent underground MCs for this solid autumn 2001 release. After singles for Grand Royal and Big Dada, much anticipation has built for a showing of what the deep-voiced rapper can do over an entire record, and the results prove mixed. With a baritone voice most similar to Chali 2Na and lyrical content ranging from the hip-hop game to the spirit of industry independence, AR's vocal delivery is laid-back and seems most comfortable bouncing off syncopated beats from the mid-bpm funk palette. Highlights include "Birds of a Feather," with its kinky beat and clean production; "Dawning of the A.G.E.," on which AR flows over down-home B3 organ samples and features Grouch and Eligh; and most notably, a standout collaboration with Atmosphere's Slug and Eyedea along with Busdriver and LMNO on "Frisbee," a blue-collar salute to musical liberation. Conclusively, Abstract Rule illustrates his voice's niche in hip-hop, though whether or not it can stand alone without a strong supporting cast is yet to be seen.