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Jesus Price Supastar

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Download links and information about Jesus Price Supastar by Sean Price. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap genres. It contains 15 tracks with total duration of 44:57 minutes.

Artist: Sean Price
Release date: 2007
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Rap
Tracks: 15
Duration: 44:57
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $9.49

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Intro (JESUS PRICE) 1:46
2. Like You 3:28
3. P-BODY (feat. Rock of Heltah Skeltah) 3:12
4. Cardiac (feat. Buckshot, Ruste Juxx & Flood) 3:47
5. Violent 3:34
6. DA GOD (feat. Buckshot & Sadat X) 3:04
7. Oops Upside Your Head (feat. Steele of Smif N Wessun) 2:37
8. CHURCH (feat. Rock of Heltah Skeltah & the Loudmouf Choir) 3:55
9. KING KONG (feat. Rock of Heltah Skeltah) 2:48
10. ONE 1:51
11. You Already Know (feat. Skyzoo) 3:17
12. Directors Cut 1:19
13. Let It Be Known (feat. Phonte of Little Brother) 3:18
14. Hearing Aid (feat. Chaundon) 3:05
15. Mess You Made (feat. Block McCloud) 3:56

Details

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Sean Price is one lyrical maverick. He doesn't have the zeal of a conscious rapper, nor does he wholly embrace the nihilism of gangsta rap, but he can be clever, thuggish, witty, and threatening without sounding contradictory. In other words, he's just himself. These traits, which facilitated his transition from being that other guy in Heltah Skeltah to Boot Camp Clik's lead MC, placed his solo debut Monkey Barz (2005) on several year-end lists for best underground rap album. For his sophomore effort, Jesus Price Supastar, all of his wit is still intact. Actually, the Brooklyn MC turns up the furnace a bit with his rhymes, sporting an outlandish braggadocio that incorporates a touch of religious blasphemy (read: stupid but hilarious references to God or Jesus). Entertaining many times over, he is completely off-the-wall yet still gutter-mouthed. He opens "Cardiac" with "the first verse is the worst/like why the f*ck they call you Jesus Price, ni**a, when you curse in church." On tracks "Stop," "Violent," and "Mess You Made," he comes off like somewhat of a street guidance counselor, and a very candid one at that, and this will probably be the closest he'll ever get to being "conscious." But in case you forgot the type of man Price is, just hear him flex lyrical muscle over the rhythmic bassline of "Da God" ("Don't try to get deep with the God/Don't try to conversate and hold hands down the street with the God") or spit not-so-subtle rhymes on "P-Body" ("Ni**a, kneel down, kiss the ring/R. Kelly a verse when I piss on your 16"). With several more productions coming from Justus League beatsmiths 9th Wonder and Khrysis, Price is able to pull this album together a little more tightly than he did with Monkey Barz. Truthfully speaking though, this LP could easily have been called Even More Monkey Barz, but there are too many worthwhile moments to consider this anything short of first-rate Sean Price material.