| | M C Mack Macknificent CD M C Mack Discography of CDs
(13 Customer Reviews)
.Formerly Of Hypnotize Minds. M C Mack Macknificent Songs Macknificent Music Review Average Rating: (4.5 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews dis one is TIGHt JUst CUZ dis he really hooked it up dis
time
without 36 or dem other punks
so go cop die one
check it out
Submitted by RAy RAe (wAHSHINGTON, USA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
M-TOWN´S FINEST MC Mack got them best beats, even better than 3-6!!! If u like that Memphis Hardcore sh-t, go get this one!!! Submitted by burgameisda (Schweinfurt, Bavaria, Germany)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
13 HOT TRACKS OUT OF 18 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! The Macknificent came hard on this one.He had at least 12 songs out of 18 that were bumpin but he could've left off about three but it was a good album overall! Submitted by robi3202 (RIPLEY,TN)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Awesome M.C. Mack's Macknificent, is by far one of his best albums out for sure not to many people know about M.C.Mack and they should... I can't wait till he comes out with his next album Submitted by a reviewer (Everett, Wa)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
M Town Bound Finally the Mack is back with brand new ishhh. Ive been waiting for a brand new mc mack album, dont get me wrong his underground releases were tight but we needed new ish 2 bump 2. Mack comes through with a solid album. Production and lyrics come tight. Can't wait 4 the upcomin kaze inc releases, til then im'a be looking 4 that k.f.c. hollla 1 Submitted by a reviewer (new york)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Purchase Macknificent CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Kami Kaze Inc Kami Kaze CD (2001)
Macknificent album
$14.29
| | T-Rock Rock Solid/4:20 CD (2003)
Macknificent CD music
$13.85
| | T-Rock Defcon 1: Lyrical Warfare CD (2003)
Macknificent music CDs
$13.89 Defcon 1: Lyrical Warfare was T-Rock's ...
| | Koopsta Knicca Undaground Muzic: Volume One CD (2003)
Macknificent songs
$12.05
| | Koopsta Knicca De Inevitable CD (2004)
Macknificent album
$13.39
| | Kami Kaze Inc Only The Strong Survive CD (2005)
Macknificent CD music
$13.39
| | Golden Gate Quartet Complete Works In Chronological Order, Vol. 6: 1949-1952 CD (2000) Import
Macknificent music CDs
$13.15
| | Lizzy Borden Murderess Metal Road Show CD (1986)
Macknificent songs
$9.69 Many bands joke that their second album will be a live album that reprises their debut, to show how much better the songs sound after several months honing them on the road. Well, Lizzy Borden went and did it. 1986's The Murderess Metal Road Show is nothing more nor less than the entirety of 1985's Love You to Pieces with a different song order and a few extra tracks from the band's first EP. The problem is that the songs actually don't sound better live: the playing is sloppy and the songs tend to ramble on listlessly ("American Metal" goes on for six full minutes, then returns for an interminable encore in "Finale") without the tightness ...
| | Fatal CD (2002)
Macknificent album
$15.65
| | Khoiba Nice Traps CD (2005) Digipak
Macknificent CD music
$14.89
| | Kitty Wells Queen Of Country CD (2006)
Macknificent music CDs
$5.69 Featuring 10 of the pioneering female country music artist's 81 hits, this best-of collects Kitty Wells's first smash, "It Wasn't God Who ...
| | Get Low Playaz What We Known Fo' CD (2006)
Macknificent songs
$10.35
| | Willie Feaster On The Dirt Road CD (2006)
Macknificent album
$13.25 Willie Feaster and his band, the Mighty Magnificents (sometimes billed as the Magnificent Six), did time as the house band at All Platinum Records, the label that eventually evolved into early rap powerhouse Sugarhill, and if their sound wasn't as revolutionary as what Keith LeBlanc and Doug Wimbish brought to those classic Grandmaster Flash and Sugarhill Gang sides, this collection proves Sylvia Robinson already had fine taste in studio musicians. Feaster and his band (which at times included as many as a dozen members) were professionals and journeymen, which means they offer up a little bit of everything on On the Dirt Road -- tough funk workouts ("Whacha Want Us to Do"), polished disco-friendly R&B ("Call Me"), funky but polished Philly-style soul in the manner of the Spinners ("I Think I Finally Got You Girl"), gritty blues wailing ("Don't Be Kissed by a Fool"), pleading East Coast soul ("I've Been Waiting"), and the occasional slow dance ("Closer to the Aisle"). While some of this stuff is essential for collectors of rare funk and soul, there's also some real filler on board; Feaster and his band were clearly top-rank musicians, but their songwriting chops weren't quite as impressive, and while they could cut a superior groove, there are also several cuts that are standard-issue soul of the era, no worse but no better than the average. The sound quality is also troublingly inconsistent, with some of ...
| | Self Against City Telling Secrets To Strangers CD (2007)
Macknificent CD music
$10.09 Self Against City fit in nicely with the new face of Drive-Thru Records circa 2006: emo-indebted pop/rock (i.e., Socratic, House of Fools, etc.) that's heavy with earnestness and easy on attitude. The band rarely, if ever, strays from glistening choruses, warm instrumentation, and sweetly melodic lines about "overrated boys and attention-starved girls a little curious, a little insecure." That's not to say that this is an exasperatingly self-aware ordeal full of saccharine and heartache; Telling Secrets to Strangers is actually so light and subtly catchy that only the most jaded of emo fans could deny its appeal. Frontman Jonathan Michael Temkin has a relaxed delivery that pleasantly rolls about songs reminiscent of contemporaries the Early November or Something Corporate, and even when he slips into pleading mode, manages to retain a very down-to-earth appeal that keeps the band grounded. With the exception of the opening (and somewhat misleading) "Becoming a Monster" -- which nicely uses crunching guitars and a ragtag backing team of Wo-ohs! to kick things up a bit -- Self Against City embrace silky and straightforward midtempo numbers. Plodding bits of keyboard and brushes of percussion admittedly make it all nice and heartfelt enough, but by the album's second half, after the coolly lustful "Tequila Moonlight," things start to blur a bit. "Back to Our Innocence" does have a little Postal Service undercurrent going on, but more attempts at some sort of variety could do worlds to break up the diary-writing-locked-in-my-bedroom vibe. Regardless of this, and to their benefit, Self Against City are already way better than most tepid attempts at recycling the swooped bang/tight jeans emo blueprint of the early 2000s. There might not be enough for them to fully stand out quite yet, but seeing as the guys actually sound like they care about their ...
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