

1 album a go-to-medicine for your different types of moods. The melodic voice of artists like which are sung by artists like Immortal Technique, Pumpkinhead, Bigzoo, Poison Pen, Diabolic, Jean Grae that makes. 1 with 16 trending songs that let you enjoy diverse genres of music. His lyrics are brutally honest and thought-provoking, and I highly recommend you grab this if you even remotely like any sort of hip-hop. Underground hip-hop, and one of the best freestyle rappers Ive ever heard. Issues repeatedly discussed on the album include poverty, drug trade, slave labor, censorship, corporate control over the media (including hip hop), the September 11th World Trade Center attacks, racism, the prison industrial complex and class struggle. Love listening to music that goes with all your mood Tune into the Revolutionary Vol. 1 As requested (and it just needed to be posted at some point), Revolutionary, Vol. The album features Mumia Abu-Jamal, who introduces the album and also provides a speech about hip hop's relationship to Homeland security. Immortal Technique claimed in an interview to have sold more than 85,000 copies. 2 attacks the United States government, especially the Bush Administration.

2 too skeletal for their likes, however, will likely find it's predecessor even tougher sledding however, the homemade-sounding productions perfectly suitable for the non-corporate sentiments of Immortal Technique's lyrics, and has a similar rough-edged charm.Revolutionary Vol. Pop culture stuff that’s somehow related to Immortal Technique’s Revolutionary, Vol.

Those who found 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 let's 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, the plain-spoken politics (the title of this album is not to be taken lightly) and bare-bones production of Revolutionary, Vol.
