| | Jeru The Damaja Wrath Of The Math CD Jeru The Damaja Discography of CDs
(4 Customer Reviews)
"This album," says the liner notes, "was created to SAVE hip-hop and the minds of people who listen to it." No empty boast, that. For rescue equipment, Jeru The Damaja has the art of the rhyme and the genius beat tactics of DJ Premier. Jeru has an obvious admiration for true hip-hop and the principles upon which it was created, and this follow-up to 1994's auspicious THE SUN RISES IN THE EAST goes a long way toward reinstalling positivity into hip-hop and putting the music back into the hands in which it belongs.
Without compromising his own street credibility, Jeru on WRATH OF THE MATH chastises other rappers who glorify gang life or portray playa images with their lyrics. On the clever "One Day," he sets out on a mission to rescue a character named Hip-Hop who has been kidnapped by materialistic MCs. "Ya Playin' Yaself" is a slap at the fake, money-hungry individuals in the rap game, who could learn a thing or two from Jeru.Entertainment Weekly (1/10/97, p.58) - "...Combined with DJ Premier's head-bobbing minimalist funk, Jeru tells it like it is like no other." - Rating: B+ Vibe (11/96, p.153) - "...Armed with a prophet's sense of social responsibility, Webster's vocab, and the best beats in the business....Jeru's at his best...when he fights playa-ism with its most potent weapon: sharply visual, action-packed narrative..." The Source (12/96, p.126) - 3 Mics - Good - "...Returning with an unabashed intolerance for the artistic moves of some well-known rap figures....Jeru The Damaja proves that his musical compositions are too mentally stimulating to be ignored..." Melody Maker (12/21-28/96, pp.66-67) - Ranked #43 on Melody Maker's list of 1996's `Albums Of The Year.' Rap Pages (12/96, p.32) - "...there are still men...amongst the Hip-Hop lot that haven't lost the vim to stand up, say something and mean something....`Ru's displeasure with current excuses for Hip-Hop runs deep....Primo's beats are the amniotic sac that surrounds the MC..." Jeru The Damaja Wrath Of The Math Songs Wrath Of The Math Music Review Purchase Wrath Of The Math CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Black Moon Enta Da Stage CD (1993)
Wrath Of The Math album
$12.99 This is the defining album of East Coast crime rap, which was largely established by the Brooklyn-based Boot Camp Clik of MCs. ENTA DA STAGE is a classic in its genre, featuring deep-in-the-crates beats by DJ Evil Dee (who continues to have a presence in New York's underground hip-hop scene), lurid street imagery delivered by MCs Buckshot and 5T and a flavor forever reminiscent ...
| | Smif-N-Wessun Dah Shinin' CD (1995)
Wrath Of The Math CD music
$12.79 Smif-N-Wessun gained instant recognition due to their first single "Bucktown," which flourished as an anthem for all of Brooklyn's underground heads. But the initial hype never died down because the DJs soon pounced on the B-side, "Let's Git ...
| | Diamond Stunts, Blunts And Hip Hop CD (1992)
Wrath Of The Math music CDs
$8.09 Diamond D had quietly provided some exciting production work and made strides within the rap music industry and community throughout the early '90s, but his name didn't become immediately recognizable until his classic guest appearance rapping on A Tribe Called Quest's "Show Business" ("Take it from Diamond/It's like mountain climbing/When it comes to rhyming/You gotta put your time in"), off their masterful second album, The Low End Theory. Even amid vintage verses by such lauded hip-hop company as Tribe's Q-Tip and Phife and Brand Nubian's Lord Jamar and Sadat X, something about Diamond D's forthright and rock-solid, but totally laid-back, style stood out. Hip-hop heads waiting to hear more from ...
| | Common Resurrection CD (1994)
Wrath Of The Math songs
$10.19 All songs written by Common Sense. Contains samples from "Protect Ya Neck" (as performed by Wu-Tang Clan) and "Power Of Love" (as performed by Alton McClain and Destiny).
The music on RESURRECTION seems deceptively simple--jazzy loops over a strong break beat--but this is only because the true focus on any Common Sense album is the lyrics. Common is an underrated rapper, possessing enormous skills on the mic, able to string together seemingly endless syllables and phrases into a fluent, flowing story line. He often speaks in soundbites, using an old commercial's ad-line or another rapper's hook, but always recreating them to fit into the story he's trying to tell, usually ...
| | Jeru The Damaja Sun Rises In The East CD (1994)
Wrath Of The Math album
$9.79
| | Freestyle Fellowship Innercity Griots CD (1993)
Wrath Of The Math CD music
$8.15 The Underground Railroad Band: Cockney "O" Dire, Archie, Volume 10, Spoon (rap vocals); Marvin McDaniel (acoustic guitar); Rodney Millon (guitar); Randall Willis (flute, saxophone); Jon Williams (trumpet); Tom Ralls (trombone); Onaje Murray ...
| | Dragonheart CD (1996) Original Soundtrack
Wrath Of The Math music CDs
$12.59
| | Pop Divas CD (2004) Box Set
Wrath Of The Math songs
$13.29
| | Lionsong Freedom Calls CD (2006)
Wrath Of The Math album
$17.09
| | Bass Mekanik Boomstyle CD (2007)
Wrath Of The Math CD music
$13.69 Composer: Bass Mekanik.
| | Red Theory CD (2008)
Wrath Of The Math music CDs
$10.15
| | Eve Boswell Sugar Rush Girl CD (2008) (Import)
$10.49 | | Ultimate Pop CD (2009) (Import) Import
Wrath Of The Math songs
$19.69
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