Create account Log in

Natural Progression

[Edit]

Download links and information about Natural Progression by Sweatshop Union. This album was released in 2003 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 01:02:53 minutes.

Artist: Sweatshop Union
Release date: 2003
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Rap
Tracks: 18
Duration: 01:02:53
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $6.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. The Answer 2:39
2. Radio Edit 3:16
3. Newsflash 0:21
4. I Got News 4:03
5. Don't Be Afraid 3:59
6. Better Day Feat. Moka Only 3:15
7. Today 3:33
8. Us 3:06
9. Truman Show 3:06
10. Baho Ang Titi Mo 1:31
11. On the Sly 3:41
12. P.O.T.B 3:50
13. Garbage Love Songs & Cheesy Jingles 3:35
14. The Way 4:12
15. Stolen Memories 4:20
16. Any Reason 3:04
17. The Thing About It 4:24
18. The Question 6:58

Details

[Edit]

This hip-hop and rap collective from Vancouver is a mishmash of styles and influences. The first tune, "The Answer," has an ethereal, ambient world flavor to it. Using inclusive lyrics, the song seems to suffer from a rather monotonous aura. Fortunately, a ska-cum-reggae tempo gets "Radio Edit" off the ground immediately in the vein of A Tribe Called Quest. There are some brief interludes such as "Newsflash" that are inane, but unfortunately the lighthearted jazz vibe on "I Got News" doesn't go anywhere. It sounds like a song Moby has a fleeting notion about recording but immediately passed on. "Don't Be Afraid" has much more groove to it, recalling fellow Canadian band Swollen Members or Cypress Hill with a subtle Oriental seasoning on top. The social commentary wanes on "Today" with cliché rhymes that seem to repeat earlier verses later on. "US" is a more concise and effect number that includes Rob the Viking and part of presidential speeches. "Baho Ang Titi Mo" is a funky instrumental that adds little to the proceedings. What happens far too often though is that the rap sounds distantly like Weird Al Yankovic, especially on the indifferent "P.O.T.B." and the bawdy, horn-filled "On the Sly." A couple of the closing efforts fare far better such as the hand-clapping mid-tempo rap of "Stolen Memories" and the Everlast-like "The Thing About It." But there tends to be as many misses are there are hits.