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The Graduate

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Download links and information about The Graduate by MC Lars. This album was released in 2006 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Alternative genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 41:11 minutes.

Artist: MC Lars
Release date: 2006
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Alternative
Tracks: 14
Duration: 41:11
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $6.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Download This Song (feat. Jaret Reddick of Bowling for Soup) 3:44
2. The Roommate from Hell (feat. mc chris) 3:18
3. 21 Concepts 2:49
4. Hot Topic Is Not Punk Rock (featuring the Matches) 2:15
5. Rapgirl 3:03
6. Generic Crunk Rap 3:02
7. Ahab 3:21
8. iGeneration 2:53
9. If I Had a Time Machine, that Would Be Fresh 1:03
10. Internet Relationships (Are Not Real Relationships) 3:24
11. Space Game 4:05
12. The Dialogue (feat. Ill Bill) 2:53
13. Six Degrees of Kurt Cobain 1:44
14. Signing Emo 3:37

Details

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What the Beastie Boys were to the '80s and the Bloodhound Gang were to the '90s, MC Lars is to the first decade of the 21st century (which, frankly, could use a nickname a bit more catchy than "the aughts") — i.e., a smarmy suburbanite equally influenced by old school and new school, hip-hop and rock, and armed with enough clever pop culture references to keep a hipper-than-thou indie kid chuckling to himself for hours. The Graduate finds the wisecracking MC portraying himself as the court jester of the iPod generation, thumbing his nose at The Man with oh-so-witty songs such as "Generic Crunk Rap," "Hot Topic Is Not Punk Rock," and "Signing Emo" that prove this Stanford alum understands you have to be smart before you can truly be a smartass. The opening "Download This Song," featuring Bowling for Soup's Jaret Reddick, uses a breakbeat the Chemical Brothers could be proud of as backdrop for a knowing deconstruction of the problems facing the music industry, with the poignant chorus, "Hey, Mr. Record Man, the joke's on you/Running your label like it was 1992/Hey, Mr. Record Man, your system can't compete/It's the new artist model, file transfer complete." The backing tracks, which borrow from influences ranging from punk and pop to techno and rap (including a self-deprecating parody of Jay-Z's "99 Problems" called "21 Concepts"), often tend toward generic laptop DJ stuff. But fans of geek-hoppers like MC Paul Barman should be able to appreciate a witty lyricist who references everything from Sartre and Craigslist to Ranger Rick and Mao Tse-Tung with tongue always planted firmly in cheek. While The Graduate may not be pumping in Jeeps on urban city streets anytime soon (read: ever), it's not difficult to imagine it providing the bong-hit soundtrack for the nation's university dorm rooms.