Black August

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 55:06

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Slow Burn

stglaw

Although I basically like Wu Tang albums, they tend to sound the same and are way too formulaic. "Black August" isn't. This album is fantastic. Not only is Killah Priest a hell of a poet, but this entire album has a subdued, almost quiet, but extreme intensity that burns throughout. The whole feel of the album is very dark, but not dark in the typical Wu Tang/RZA way. It's nice to see one of the Wu Tang gang actually break away from the tired old formula and create something great like this.

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They Say All Media Guide

Though Killah Priest isn’t one of the high-profile members of Wu-Tang, time and again one in their middle ranks will release an amazing record, oblivious of the charts (if not the production blueprint of a solo Wu-Tang record). So it’s no surprise that Black August is a quality release as well, driven not by money producers but by Killah Priest’s potent rapping skills and occasional flashes of poetic lyricism. The skills come across in spades on gritty, street-level tales of extra-legal activity like “Robbery” and “Do the Damn Thing” that, importantly, never fall prey to sensationalism. Like Ghostface Killah, Priest also has the ability to convey the power of hip-hop in a song, the same fleeting feelings evoked by all those dusty soul samples on Wu-Tang records. He lays it out on the chorus of “Black August (Daylight),” the opener — “It’s so beautiful, unusual, and remember y’all/this is no rap, these are moments captured on a Kodak.” Notorious B.I.G. it’s not, but that’s exactly what separates Killah Priest from the hundreds of East Coast rappers busy scrapping for nothing more than multi-platinum records. – John Bush

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