In 2005, Immortal Technique teamed up with DJ Green Lantern and Mos Def for the controversial single Bin Laden, a scathing indictment of President George W. 2 too skeletal for their likes, however, will likely find its predecessor even tougher sledding however, the homemade-sounding production is perfectly suitable for the noncorporate sentiments of Immortal Technique's lyrics, and has a similar rough-edged charm. He self-released his debut album, Revolutionary, Vol. Those who found the beats on Revolutionary, Vol. ![]() Immortal Technique works the same political side of the street as Dead Prez and the Coup, but much like Chuck D, the godfather of the political rap scene, the Peruvian-born rapper never lets his ideas get in the way of his flow, and manages to express complex and reasoned opinions, only occasionally devolving into simple sloganeering. 2 the following year, that it was reissued in 2004, sounding as up-to-date as ever. However, the album built enough underground buzz, helped by the more widely distributed Revolutionary, Vol. ![]() 1 missed MTV and Rap City entirely, surprise surprise. ![]() ![]() Originally self-released in 2002 in an edition of only 3,000 copies, the plain-spoken politics (the title of this album is not to be taken lightly) and bare-bones production of Revolutionary, Vol. immortal-technique-revolutionary-vol-1 Scanner Internet Archive HTML5 Uploader 1.6.4.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |