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Sound of the City

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Download links and information about Sound of the City by Black Milk. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap genres. It contains 17 tracks with total duration of 40:26 minutes.

Artist: Black Milk
Release date: 2005
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Rap
Tracks: 17
Duration: 40:26
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Intro 1:23
2. N***a What 2:23
3. Danger Ft. T3 and Phat KAT 3:33
4. Pimp Cup 3:42
5. Duck 1:33
6. So Gone 2:31
7. This That Ft. Marv Won 3:02
8. Dirty Horns 0:56
9. Bang Dis Sh&@t Ft. Name Tag 3:13
10. Swing Dat Far 2:26
11. Sound of the City Ft. Fat Ray and Elzhi 3:51
12. Dirty Guitar 1:27
13. Eternal Ft. Baatin 3:42
14. Applause 1:53
15. Holla Like U Know Me Ft. Que Diesel 3:20
16. Outro 0:27
17. Hidden Track 1:04

Details

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Although it has the look of a true record, Sound of the City — put out on Black Milk's own Music House label before he signed to Fat Beats and went on to release one of the best hip-hop albums of the year in 2007 with Popular Demand — often seems more like a mixtape than an official full-length, with nearly as many sub-two-minute tracks than not. This, however, doesn't detract from the overall feel and flow of Sound of the City, which, thanks to Black's strong beats and engaging vocals, keeps the pace up even with all the breaks. Lyrically, he's not as sophisticated as he can be on Popular Demand, but his flow is good and fits his rawer, soul-based production well. In fact, it is the production that is most interesting here, moving from the very Dilla-esque "Pimp Cup" to a Georgia Anne Muldrow-ish "Eternal" to the harder, Beatles-sampling "Bang Dis Sh&@t" while still maintaining his own distinctive sound. This versatility allows him to successfully cater to the guest MCs he brings on, with grittier, darker beats on the excellent "Dangerous" that emphasize Phat Kat's rougher voice and Slum Village's T3's nasally delivery, or the thumping bass and soul sample of "Holla Like U Know Me" that sits under Que Diesel's — one of the few lesser known Detroit MCs on the disc — vocals nicely. The shorter tracks here, too, aren't distracting or unnecessary; instead, they tie everything together and make Sound of the City seem very much like a unified whole, and something both fans of Black Milk and underground hip-hop should check out.