The Most Blunted
The founder of Boston hip hop back in 1990, rapper Scientifik (Born Dinitry A. Behrmann on July 24, 1972; died June 4, 1998) recorded at least two LPs in the 90s. But it is Criminal, which was denied a proper domestic release due to industry politricks, that lives on in the boom-bap afterlife of folklore, vinyl bootleg, hissy dub, and mp3 download. Criminal boasts a mid-90s dream team of producers – deities RZA, Buckwild, and Diamond D contribute beats – as well as a tragic, dramatic back story. Police theorize that Scientifik shot his girlfriend to death and then turned his gun on himself in 1998, but the case is still officially unsolved due to incomplete evidence. Perhaps unsurprisingly, this record retains a cult following. It ain’t hard to tell why the music is still captivating. On the mic Scientifik is certainly competent, and by 1994 standards he operates correctly, dropping jewelz and relating crime sagas in a soldierly, commanding voice that flexes just enough to reveal his famished intensity. It doesn’t hurt that some of the beats are absolutely tremendous bangers. The mid-album string of “Jungles Of Da East,” “I Got Plans,” and “Lawtown” is as good as it gets; each song typifies that ol’ brooding, moody, Gotham City at midnight hardcore rap sound that safe harbor mixshow DJs and their insomniac fans once coveted. Criminal is a work teeming with skills that successfully panders to the consensus of aficionados; this is the album’s primary strength and its ultimate weakness. Even if we adjust for the era’s overflow of beloved gems and our current nostalgia for the cerebral street music of yesterday, we are left with mega-quality sans distinction. Guest verses from hugely magnetic legends Diamond D and Ed OG only accentuate Scientifik’s dearth of album-carrying charisma. Criminal lacks the dimension and enjoyability of similarly shelved and/or sabotaged mid-90s projects like Jemini the Gifted One’s Scars and Pain, even if its standout songs shine brighter. Quoted from: https://root.theworkpc.com/music/preview?img=http://www.ohword.com/reviews/15/scientifik---criminal (some of it because it seems like some people think he died in 1996, he died in 1998. And it's Jungles Of Da East, not East Coast Jungle) Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
The founder of Boston hip hop back in 1990, rapper Scientifik (Born Dinitry A. Behrmann on July 24, 1972; died June 4, 1998) recorded at least two LPs in the 90s. But it is Criminal, which was denied a proper domestic release due to industry politricks, that lives on in the boom-bap afterlife of folklore, vinyl bootleg, hissy dub, and mp3 download. Criminal boasts a mid-90s dream team of producers – deities RZA, Buckwild, and Diamond D contribute beats – as well as a tragic, dramatic back story. Police theorize that Scientifik shot his girlfriend to death and then turned his gun on himself in 1998, but the case is still officially unsolved due to incomplete evidence. Perhaps unsurprisingly, this record retains a cult following. It ain’t hard to tell why the music is still captivating. On the mic Scientifik is certainly competent, and by 1994 standards he operates correctly, dropping jewelz and relating crime sagas in a soldierly, commanding voice that flexes just enough to reveal his famished intensity. It doesn’t hurt that some of the beats are absolutely tremendous bangers. The mid-album string of “Jungles Of Da East,” “I Got Plans,” and “Lawtown” is as good as it gets; each song typifies that ol’ brooding, moody, Gotham City at midnight hardcore rap sound that safe harbor mixshow DJs and their insomniac fans once coveted. Criminal is a work teeming with skills that successfully panders to the consensus of aficionados; this is the album’s primary strength and its ultimate weakness. Even if we adjust for the era’s overflow of beloved gems and our current nostalgia for the cerebral street music of yesterday, we are left with mega-quality sans distinction. Guest verses from hugely magnetic legends Diamond D and Ed OG only accentuate Scientifik’s dearth of album-carrying charisma. Criminal lacks the dimension and enjoyability of similarly shelved and/or sabotaged mid-90s projects like Jemini the Gifted One’s Scars and Pain, even if its standout songs shine brighter. Quoted from: https://root.theworkpc.com/music/preview?img=http://www.ohword.com/reviews/15/scientifik---criminal (some of it because it seems like some people think he died in 1996, he died in 1998. And it's Jungles Of Da East, not East Coast Jungle) Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Lawtown
Downlo Ho
Jungles Of Da East
Criminal
Still an herb dealer
Overnite Gangsta
Yeah daddy
Fallen Star
i got planz (featuring Diamond)
As Long As You Know (Featuring Edo. G)
I got planz
As long as you know
I Ain't The Damn One
I Used to Know Ya
The Most Blunted
I'm Taking Your Girl
Slicka Picka Upper
Bitch I Don't Need Ya
Lawtown (Prod. by Ed O.G)
Down Lo Ho
It's Murda Son
Download Ho
Hardcore Love
Disco Tech
It's on
Overnight Gangsta
I Got Planz Featuring Diamond D (Prod. by Diamond D)
Sisters & Brothers
Still An Herb Dealer (Prod. by Rhythm Nigga Joe)
Overnite Gangsta (Prod. by Buckwild)
Jungles Of Da East (Prod. by Scientifik)
I Got Planz (F/ Diamond)
As Long As You Know Featuring Ed O.G (Prod. by The RZA)
Yeah Daddy (Prod. by Diamond D)
Criminal (Prod. by Ed O.G)
Downlo Ho (Prod. by Buckwild)
Fallen Star (Prod. by Buckwild)
As Long As You Know (F/ Edo G)
All Around G
Downlo Hoe
I Got Planz (feat. Diamond D)
I Got Planz (Feat. Diamond)
06 - I Ain't The Damn One
01 - I Used To Know Ya
Uncontrollable
02 - Bitch I Don't Need Ya
Bitch, I Don't Need Ya
03 - Slicka Picka Upper
I Got Plans (feat. Diamond)
07 - the Most Blunted
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