just got around to listen to the project and its not for me it just felt soul less wasnt feeling the production on this would of them just do a 25th anniversary of the big picture with some added remastered tracks like now or never, games females play OG, alone with stephen simmonds and marquee but the younger generation who never listened to the freestyles may enjoy it.
It baffles me how Mass Appeal couldnāt reach out to ONLY the best producers in the game for each of these projects.
And whose idea was it to make Royce the f***ing executive producer of this Big L album?!
It baffles me how Mass Appeal couldnāt reach out to ONLY the best producers in the game for each of these projects.
And whose idea was it to make Royce the f***ing executive producer of this Big L album?!
I mean, the Ghostface album absolutely delivered? Mobb Deep project incredible. This series was pretty fire.
I mean, the Ghostface album absolutely delivered? Mobb Deep project incredible. This series was pretty fire.
Supreme Clientele 2 is the Happy Gilmore 2 of rap tbh
I mean, the Ghostface album absolutely delivered? Mobb Deep project incredible. This series was pretty fire.
Mobb Deep had two of the best producers. Supreme Clientele 2 did the exact opposite. Why did he walk away from the Ye and Mike Dean production?
Mobb Deep's album still far and away the best of the Mass Appeal series
why the f*** is mac miller on this
Huge Big L fan, one of the people to revive Big L's history in mainstream, worked with unreleased Big L himself that was sanctioned, and he's also past away n considered an icon in his own right
Mobb Deep's album still far and away the best of the Mass Appeal series
One of the best rap albums of the year.
It baffles me how Mass Appeal couldnāt reach out to ONLY the best producers in the game for each of these projects.
And whose idea was it to make Royce the f***ing executive producer of this Big L album?!
Da 5ā9!? Lmao I havenāt listened but does he even produce
They did a great job on that Mobb Deep album. It was produced by Prodigy's two closest producers, so it feels like he was actually part of the project. It's cohesive and really does sound like those guys were all in the studio creating it together. Lots of love and respect went into that one, and you can hear it. I don't hate this Big L album, but I don't see myself listening to it much in the future. The features are mostly random. They aren't bad, but it doesn't feel natural the way the Mobb album does. It's just weird. I'm not a fan of many posthumous albums unless the artist was actually part of the process. That Mobb album is an exception. The last Tribe album is up there too, but I think Phife was around contributing his parts. I'm hoping the De La album is done tastefully. I have faith in that one. This L album is just kind of okay in my opinion. Feels a little exploitive honestly.
Pretty sure phife only doed late into the process. All his contributions are intentionally there to create the album. I guess there couldve been 1 or 2 phife verses more, but all in all its just a legit album, like 7 days theory and life after death
why the f*** is mac miller on this
Besides what was already mentioned, it probablybwas an unfinished mac song, they threw L on
Pretty sure phife only doed late into the process. All his contributions are intentionally there to create the album. I guess there couldve been 1 or 2 phife verses more, but all in all its just a legit album, like 7 days theory and life after death
Yeah, that's why I was saying that one worked out well. Phife was most likely gone for a lot of the process in making that, but his parts were specifically made for that album and weren't scraps of unused verse from the cutting room floor. I hope this is the case with De La, and it sounds like it will be. The Mobb album is maybe the best posthumous Hip Hop album I've ever heard that actually used older verses that weren't recorded for that specific album. They made it sound pretty organic for what it is, and it exceeded all my expectations. Very tasteful and respectful of Prodigy's legacy and doesn't feel exploitive in the least. Funny one of my favorite albums of all time is a posthumously released one that wasn't even fully finished when the artist died. Jimi Hendrix's Cry Of Love is a masterpiece.
Yeah, that's why I was saying that one worked out well. Phife was most likely gone for a lot of the process in making that, but his parts were specifically made for that album and weren't scraps of unused verse from the cutting room floor. I hope this is the case with De La, and it sounds like it will be. The Mobb album is maybe the best posthumous Hip Hop album I've ever heard that actually used older verses that weren't recorded for that specific album. They made it sound pretty organic for what it is, and it exceeded all my expectations. Very tasteful and respectful of Prodigy's legacy and doesn't feel exploitive in the least. Funny one of my favorite albums of all time is a posthumously released one that wasn't even fully finished when the artist died. Jimi Hendrix's Cry Of Love is a masterpiece.
Hav and alc loved P. Like for real. You can feel it all over the album
Da 5ā9!? Lmao I havenāt listened but does he even produce
Produce and executive produce are two different things
Hav and alc loved P. Like for real. You can feel it all over the album
Absolutely. I was worried about that album, I ain't gonna lie. Thankfully it turned out to be exactly what we all wanted I think. Definitely my favorite release in this Mass Appeal rollout so far. Great album and it'll be hard to top, but we'll see what De La, Nas, and Premier have for us all soon!
Mobb Deep's album still far and away the best of the Mass Appeal series
Havoc & Al made damn sure it sounded like a true Mobb album.
Helluva' job & a top 5 album oty for me.
Produce and executive produce are two different things
He got no business doing either lol