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iTunes 9 for Mac + PC

Life

KRS-One

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  Name Artist Time Price  
1
Explicit Bling Blung KRS-One 3:33 $0.99 View In iTunes
2
Explicit The Way We Live KRS-One 3:21 $0.99 View In iTunes
3
Explicit Woke Up KRS-One 3:05 $0.99 View In iTunes
4
Explicit Mr. Percy KRS-One 4:22 $0.99 View In iTunes
5
Explicit F-cked Up KRS-One 3:31 $0.99 View In iTunes
6
Explicit Freedom KRS-One 3:33 $0.99 View In iTunes
7
Explicit I'm On the Mic KRS-One 4:05 $0.99 View In iTunes
8
Explicit Gimme da Gun KRS ONE featuring Raphi 2:28 $0.99 View In iTunes
9
Explicit Life Interlude KRS-One 1:54 $0.99 View In iTunes
10
Explicit I Ain't Leavin' KRS-One 3:56 $0.99 View In iTunes
11
Explicit Organ Break KRS-One 1:11 $0.99 View In iTunes
12
Explicit I Am There KRS-One 2:29 $0.99 View In iTunes
13
Explicit Still Slippin' KRS-One 2:26 $0.99 View In iTunes
14
Explicit My Life KRS-One 3:41 $0.99 View In iTunes

Album Review

KRS-One has always been a socially conscious rapper, tackling different subjects throughout his career, most of which relate to problems that face many urban dwellers, especially black ones. But in Life, race is an issue he chooses not to tackle; in fact, he makes a point to mention that specifically. "I am hip-hop/I don't speak for blacks," he states in "Still Slippin'," understanding that his art has the ability to reach a large demographic (something he also addresses in "I'm on the Mic"). Instead, KRS-One speaks of problems that can and do afflict all people. "Everywhere across the nation more people are joining the homeless population," he states in "Mr. Percy," a song that discusses how easy it is to find yourself without a place to stay, despite your best efforts to work, save money, and improve your situation "with the state of the economy and the way that it is." In the electric guitar-driven "I Ain't Leavin'," KRS declares his "purpose is to inspire the poor" as he tries to explain their situation and sympathize with them. This is all delivered between lines about his own talent and dedication to hip-hop, ideas that, like on any true rap album, certainly aren't forgotten or ignored. But KRS-One has been writing rhymes for so long that this sort of thing doesn't seem trite or boastful. He talks about himself and the genre simultaneously, equating one with the other ("I am to hip-hop what flour is to pancakes"), which isn't actually uncalled for, being that he has been such a major figure in it, and it's a technique that keeps his lyrics pretty interesting. KRS-One has been around for a while, but his style has changed as the genre's progressed, and Life is an indication of this. It's not a perfect record, but the rhymes are pretty thoughtful, the beats are pretty good, the subject matter is pretty unique. Perhaps it can all be summed up best in a line from the closing song, "My Life" (originally stated in BDP's "I'm Still No. 1" : "You know what you need to learn?/Old-school artists don't always burn." If all of them are as talented as KRS-One is, that statement's absolutely true.

Customer Reviews

THIS IS HIP HOP.
     

True hip hop at it's finest! No one touches KRS, no one.

Real Hip-Hop
     

The only thing i have to say about this album is that KRS has kept it real for decades, and just when i thought REAL Hip-Hop was dead.............KRS-One showed that i was wrong. If you like to LISTEN to music and not just bop ya head in the club or in your car not really listening to what the artist is saying, buy it, listen to it. If you like Gang Starr, Roots, Mos Def....etc GET THIS. And i would like to thank KRS-One for this album.

HE'S BACK!!!
     

MAN this $hit is noodles yo!!! The Teacha bangin'em up side they headz again! He always spits the raw but this is his best ALBUM since "...Boom Bap". He's flippin' mad different flows, concepts, lessons, beats, time signatures EVERYTHING!!! Nowadays everything sounds the same. To me THAT'S what makes a good album great, when you can push the envelope, try new things, stay current (if not ahead of your time) and do it all without comin' wack. That's what an artist is supposed to do! Otherwise you just recycling the same formula. He even got some hot club joints too. "The Way We Live" is a banga yo but instead of talkin 'bout crystal & ice he's STILL talkin' about Hip-Hop kulture!!! He really suprised a die hard BDP fan like me. CLASSIC!!!

Biography

Born: August 20, 1965

Genre: Hip Hop/Rap

Years Active: '80s, '90s, '00s

KRS-One (born Kris Parker) was the leader of Boogie Down Productions, one of the most influential hardcore hip-hop outfits of the '80s. At the height of his career, roughly 1987-1990, KRS-One was known for his furiously political and socially conscious raps, which is the source of his nickname, "the Teacher." Around the time of 1990's Edutainment, BDP's audience began to slip as many fans thought his raps were becoming preachy. As a reaction, KRS-One began to re-establish his street credibility with...
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