Al Tariq and No I.D. albums
hogginthefogg
6,098 Posts
I listened to "God Connections" and "Accept Your Own and Be Yourself" on my ipod yesterday and still enjoyed them. I think I probably dig them because of good memories associated with the times they came out.Why do I feel like Paychecks was into these, too? No I.D.'s album had lines about "completion like the number 9" (and I know he sampled Kool Ass Fash saying "Tariq" at least once). Who else will stand up for these?
Comments
Yeah, me, too.
I let go of my copy of God Connections about six years ago--to me, Fash was always the weakest rapper in the crew. None of them were great, but Juju and Les had more personality.
Also like the extended story involving Crocheted-pants Com that fails to actually feature him.
Just kidding...no, I don't.
Wild Cowboys is kind of a terd. I won't lie--I had it way back when, though. An era when people actually cared about such a thing seems like ancient history.
Absolutely.
I'm not wild about either album, but I do like No ID's better. "State to State" was my joint.
Yes!
This thread needed a few darts thrown!
Yes. I didnt even cop when it dropped, and i finally copped it years later.
As a whole the Lp is wack.
Psycho Les outdid himself on the beats
Its a really good slept on album.
both of you are trippin'
I'm saying. Couldn't they have thrown this into the mix just once...
Yes, it's wonderful to see him getting over his chronic shyness...
but god connects is dope! think not is hot and all the songs with the beatnuts on em are thorough.psycho les says some vintage shit
yous about to get caught in
hollow points soaring
burnin holes through your ralph lauren
you best take flight like jordan
or get tore in
to pieces as my fo5 releases
BLAOW
you know that the east is in the house
call for back up
present danger s--o-s
the mad 'lombian psycho les...
or something like that. dope as fuck.havent listened to it in years, but tht shits still fresh in my mind!
Thought the No ID album was dope when it came out but haven't listened to it in years. Dude was cool enough to give me and Moss a copy of the album like 6 months before it came out when we went to Chicago back then. I think the tape also had some cuts from the 3rd Common album on it.
That definitely was the tepid last hurrah of boom-bap rap, but Peace Akki was dope, and Stages And Lights was also a good one, and I always will have a soft spot for The Lump Lump as that was the first 'reunion' track of Brand Nubian.
It's a shame that didn't happen.
I, myself, was delighted to discover a community of like-minded diggeurs when I stumbled across SoulStrut six years later in '03, but ultimately disgusted as f**k that they were all still all listening to the last-remnants-of-boom-bap from the likes of Al Tariq and No ID.
but really, this schitt is tired.