Year of the Beast [LP] by C-Rayz Walz: Vinyl LP Cover

    Year of the Beast [LP] C-Rayz Walz

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    Vinyl LP

    • Release Date: 05/17/2005
    • Sales Rank: 164,596
    • Label: DEFINITIVE JUX
    • UPC: 600308811416
     
    • Overview
    • Tracks
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Details & Credits
    Track List
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    Year of the Beast [LP]

    1R'thentic 3:14
    2Firstwordsworst 3:21
    3Knowledge 3:37
    4Walkthrough 4:32
    5Therhythmintervention 2:17
    6Streetreppin 4:02
    7Paradise 4:41
    8Musictakeovah 3:24
    9Pink 4:24
    10Carefree 4:25
    11Saywerd 3:10
    12Blackout 3:46
    13Blacksoap 3:42
    14Markofthebeast 1:43
    15Officiallylost Bonus Track 3:17

    About this Artist

    Editorial Reviews

    Working that balance of deep and freewheeling he has since hitting the scene, C-Rayz Walz leaves behind the cohesion of 2003's Ravipops and tackles nearly everything on Year of the Beast. A natural-born freestyler and battle rapper, the skilled and schooled Walz is up to the challenge, and while listening to the album in one go is exhausting -- despite a 55-minute run time, modest by hip-hop standards -- it's a success if taken as a highlight-filled mixtape displaying what this boy can do. Showy lines like "I walk through the ghetto holding my dic-(pregnant pause)-tionary" are backed up by deep ones while approachable, radio-friendly numbers are tempered with challenging productions that sit with the Def Jux label's most maverick moments. Punks get what's coming to them on the ghetto-snide old-schooler "Pink" while "Blackout" acknowledges the rock-rap of its time and mixes in an up-to-the-minute, D12-flavored chorus. Doesn't seem like all this should be on the same album, but it is, with no segues, no concept holding it together. There's a lot of hunger though, and genuine talent that wants to be heard as much as it wants to brag. With so many rappers pimpin' their sneaker line or trying extra hard to fit the noble rule book of the underground backpackers, that's a rare commodity in 2005 and one that's easier than usual for fans of the underground to connect with. Walz burned his old rhyme book before recording the album, so freedom is in effect on Year of the Beast. You'll have to chuck out your own hang-together EPs from all this divergent material, but it's definitely worth it. David Jeffries, All Music Guide

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