Muscle Car Chronicles | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | February 14, 2012 | |||
Recorded | 2009–2010 | |||
Genre | Hip hop, alternative hip hop | |||
Length | 19:23 | |||
Label | DD172 | |||
Producer | Curren$y, Damon Dash(exec.) Sean O'Connell | |||
Curren$y and Sean O'Connell chronology | ||||
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- Curren$y Muscle Car Chronicles
- Curren$y Net Worth
- Muscle Car Chronicles Curren Y Zip 2
- Muscle Car Chronicles Curren Y Zip Code
![Curren$y Curren$y](/uploads/1/2/6/4/126435842/169090541.jpg)
Muscle Car Chronicles, a 2-Disc set, was released on February 14, 2012. Currensy also planned on releasing Pilot Talk III in 2013, and mentioned the possibility of it being a free album. In February 2012, Currensy released the EP Here., and a few days later released another EP #The1st28 with Styles P. Muscle Car Chronicles, a 2-Disc set, was released on February 14, 2012. Currensy also planned on releasing Pilot Talk III in 2013, and mentioned the possibility of it being a free album. In February 2012, Currensy released the EP Here., and a few days later released another EP #The1st28 with Styles P.
Curren$y Muscle Car Chronicles
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
HipHop DX | [1] |
XXL | (XL)[2] |
Muscle Car Chronicles is the collaboration studio album by American rapper Curren$y and Sean O'Connell. It is produced by Sean O'Connell and contains features of Mikey Rocks of The Cool Kids and Tabi Bonney. A movie for this album has been produced. It was going to be released along with the album. It is Curren$y's final album released through DD172; he is now signed to Warner Bros.[3] The album was released on February 14, 2012.[4] The iTunes edition of the album features 10 bonus country rock songs performed by Sean O'Connell.[5]
Track listing[edit]
- All tracks were produced by Sean O'Connell.
![Muscle car chronicles curren y zip 2 Muscle car chronicles curren y zip 2](/uploads/1/2/6/4/126435842/111942688.jpg)
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | 'Soundbombin' | 1:28 |
2. | 'N.O. Shit' | 1:39 |
3. | 'Frosty' | 2:01 |
4. | 'Razors & Chopsticks' | 1:53 |
5. | 'Not So Much' | 1:47 |
6. | 'Fly Out (Part Deux)' | 3:10 |
7. | 'Bout It 2011' | 2:56 |
8. | 'The Strangest Life' (featuring Mckenzie Eddy) | 1:25 |
9. | 'Fly Out (Part Trés)' (featuring Mikey Rocks and Tabi Bonney) | 3:04 |
Total length: | 19:23 |
References[edit]
- ^Krishnamurthy, Sowmya (13 Feb 2012). 'REVIEW: Curren$y - 'Muscle Car Chronicles''. HipHop DX. Retrieved 13 Feb 2012.
- ^'XXL MAG Review - Muscle Car Chronicles'.
- ^'Muscle Car Chronicles Cover & Tracklist'. Retrieved February 18, 2011.
- ^'Muscle Car Chronicles'. Retrieved January 30, 2011.
- ^'Muscle Car Chronicles'. Retrieved November 2, 2012.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Muscle_Car_Chronicles&oldid=865670800'
Curren$y is ostensibly one of the hardest working (and most likeable) rappers in the game, with a slew of consistent mixtapes since 2006 and buzzy features alongside everybody from Wiz Khalifa and Big K.R.I.T. to ScHoolboy Q. Spitta is nothing if not prolific, but what defines him is also his greatest enemy. His laundry list of a repertoire ultimately feels disparate – nibbles versus a hearty meal – and he’s still generally viewed as another, albeit adept, weed rapper still on the cusp of truly breaking. In his forthcoming seventh studio album Muscle Car Chronicles, Spitta doesn’t reinvent the wheel – it’s still a lot of braggadocio and weed talk – but he repackages his wares in a tight, fresh set.
Muscle Car Chronicles is a lush offering in which the New Orleans MC rhymes over instrumentation from the likes of The Mars Volta’s Thomas Pridgen, Robert E. Corrigan, Jr. and singer McKenzie Eddy. It’s produced by Sean O’Connell, a folk producer/songwriter/artist signed to Damon Dash’s DD172 (Dash is also co-credited as the album’s Executive Producer alongside O’Connell and Curren$y). Be clear: this isn’t a rapper trying to do a rock record or shamelessly pander to gain a new audience. This is genre-bending done right to create a really gorgeous sounding rap record.
Curren$y Net Worth
The album opener, “Soundbombin’” is laced with mean guitars and live drums and kick-starts Curren$y tough talking. “Tell the driver to pull my truck up/Me and this L.A. woman stumbling out the club fucked up/The Jets my set I so love us/Call home/tell my bitch I come back after I come up.” A tune to the self-proclaimed “coolest nigga ever,” “Frosty” is infused with spooky electric organs to enhance lyrics like “Casper on these fools/Float/I’m talking about the Caspian Sea, ho.” Curren$y hasn’t lost his signature sense of humor. “The Strangest Life” flips Jim Morrison of The Doors’ famous quote, “This is the strangest life I’ve ever known” but famous features are thankfully slim – “Fly Out (Part Très) features Mikey Rocks of The Cool Kids and Tabi Bonney – which allows the focus to be on Spitta completely.
Muscle Car Chronicles Curren Y Zip 2
MCC’s standout gem “Bout It 2011” is a loving homage to Spitta’s No Limit roots. “Jets nigga/Bout it bout it/Roll one and match one if you bout it bout it/ Smoke one for C-Murder you are not forgotten/If you lookin’ for Spitta/find me where it’s cloudy, cloudy,” he raps. A tinge of nostalgia, it’s a fresh and unique interpretation that does justice to Master P’s original cut.
Muscle Car Chronicles Curren Y Zip Code
The Hip Hop cognoscenti often muses that Spitta is just one hit from reaching his full potential; he’s just one “Black And Yellow” away from reaching that upper echelon. MCC isn’t going to be that, but shows a deeper, more interesting sense of artistry than we’ve seen thus far and brings him one step closer to fulfilling that dream.