
- Collision Course
- "Warning Collision Course" (breakcore)
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Breakcore & Industrial
Anti Pop, Dj Scud/Nomex, Bad Company, Sensational, Patric Catani...
1
Compilation sortie en 1999 chez PIAS (Sic !) et tombée inexplicablement dans notre escarcelles... Quelques copies seulement !
- Word Sound 49
- "Weapons Of Mass Destruction" (hip hop)
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Hip Hop
- Word Sound 37 CD
- "Heavyseighter" (rough roots)
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Hip Hop
Quality hip-hop records are called "tight" for good reason: The production is rigidly calculated, the rhyme schemes scientific, the hooks precision-engineered. What Brooklyn rapper Sensational coughs up on his weirdly winning third LP is the polar opposite. The beats are deliberately distorted and dirty, choruses are irregular, and lyrics routinely surge into overdubbed fuzz or muffled obscurity. If other MCs spit rhymes, Sensational gargles them out in an offhand jumble and then meanders out of the studio without bothering to shut off his primitive recording gear. But while the muddy production quality and haphazard verses are initially off-putting, Heavyweighter's sloppy aesthetic grows on you. Stilted, smoked-out cuts like "Tearin' It Up" and the plodding "Style Indiglo" are hypnotic, and Sensational's throaty orations, which hobble through weaving and wallowing, stand up to repeated listens. Throw Heavyweighter on when you're ready to get loose. - Rolling Stone If you're not up on Sensational by now, you must be shooting some really good smack or you just returned from a five-year Peace Corps mission to Iwo Jima. Whatever the case, if you fiend for real hip-hop, drop what you're doing and grab a copy of Heavyweighter (WSCD037), Sensational's third and most blazingest full-length to date. After dropping Loaded With Power (WSCD022) and Corner The Market (WSCD032), two dusted jewels, which showed that hip-hop is still alive and well and living in Crooklyn, the MC/Producer formerly known as Torture (of the Jungle Brothers) clocks in with his strongest work to date. Heavyweighter is destined to finally show the world who the most bold and innovative voice in hip-hop really is--despite all you whack-ass journalists and deejays out there who front. What the beats are too dirty for you? This is hip-hop, fool. Get a real job. Even though Sensational made most of this album using digital equipment, it's still got that snap, crackle, but no pop. Dirtier than that Bastard and Kooler than Keith, Sensational's star is on the rise like a dick in the morning. Even without the hype he will prevail because he's coming like a black hole to swallow up everything in his path. One listen to Heavyweighter and you'll be toe up from the flo' up. Every once in a blue moon, something comes along which is too powerful to be held back by the music drug industry fashion rackett. The time is now at hand....for Heavyweighter.
- Word Sound 44 CD
- "Natural Shine" (deep roots)
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Hip Hop
7
What can you say about this guy Sensational? Yeah, he's crazy, he's out there, he's a nut. But he also keeps coming with the sound you just can't keep down. After numerous guest spots, four solo albums, a feature film (Crooked: The Movie & The Soundtrack WSCD41), and now his fifth full-length, Natural Shine (WSCD044), it's safe to say that Sensational ain't no joke. He's got that Natural Shine, a burning charisma that incinerates all sucker MCs. After showing and proving as the posta child of the underground in Crooked, Sensational returns to elevate the game to new levels of dopeness. Armed with greater production values, cyber-beats, and a fuzz-free mic, the scrappiest MC/producer on the unscene crafts a potent elixir of hip-hop madness. Right from the "Jump Off," Sensational sounds hungrier than ever, his muted growl sharper and more focussed through cuts like "Stock Market Connection" and "Style Notice." You can also hear what he's saying as he drops punchlines that'll be giving you flashbacks like LSD. Whether its weed or women, beatboxing or freestylin' off the head top on "Press Record," Sensational is on a mission to make his visions of grandeur a reality. And just try to overthrow the flow. Unlike previous outings, Sensational hands over some of the production duties to Brooklyn's DJ Karlos, who also engineered most of the album at his Amazonas Jungle Studios. Additional production support from the Ill Saint ("Super Stylin'") and Japanese noiz arkitekt, Kouhei ("Jump Off") round out the tight, 14 track set. Sensational brings out his crew on "cipher" featuring Ed, Kev Hutch, and Black Chameleon, but Natural Shine is a solo affair that speaks from the heart of darkness.



