Sittin' On Chrome

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (52 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 72:26

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Must Have for Hip-Hop Heads

lyricalex

This was one of my favorite albums in the 90's. Me being from VA, it was a perfect match of the hip-hop culture where i'm from. East Coast breakbeats, Down South Bass influenced with a little drop of West Coast with the sample selection. Classic 90's hip-hop!!

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maybe ahead of its time

themojoking

At the end of the day maybe masta Ace saw the writing on the wall alittle bit too early. On this album Ace transformed alot of his sound into "Brooklyn" bass,which in essence was southern sounding production. The album didn't really catch on like it should, because neither New York, or southern heads really knew what to make of it. But tracks like "Born to Roll", "eastbound" and "Sittin on Chrome" where great sounding songs with much more lyrical punch then most artists provide. After you download this one go get Slaughta House, Masta's classic album

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Classic!

bongolicious1

if you liked it then, you'll love it now

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They Say All Media Guide

In the five years that passed between his debut, Take a Look Around, and his third full-length, Sittin’ on Chrome, Brooklyn rapper Masta Ace’s sound changed a lot. Angrier lyrics were already starting to show up on his sophomore release, SlaughtaHouse, but it was nothing in comparison to Sittin’ on Chrome. Not that the themes are fueled by testosterone and rage here (and not that they were on SlaughtaHouse, either, though there was a great deal more vitriol), but the overall feel of the album — which has by now moved past the boom bap old-school beats into fuller, gloomier production that more aptly represents the mid-’90s East Coast sound — is much darker, with slower, heavier songs that ponder life in the ghetto. But the record’s not an attack on the system that has caused the poor conditions of inner-city existence; rather, it’s more of a collection of sketches that show it in its entirety, both the good and the bad. The whole Masta Ace Incorporated crew (Lord Digga, Leschea, and Paula Perry) is present here and does a good job — along with Ace, of course, whose flow and lyrics combine to show him off at his best — at adding depth and realism to the album’s 16 cuts, interludes and all. It’s a formula that clearly works well: Sittin’ on Chrome boasted the MC’s most popular songs, “Born to Roll” (which was also included as a bonus track on SlaughtaHouse), “The I.N.C. Ride,” and the title track itself, but the other material — “Eastbound,” “People in My Hood” — is equally as interesting, and makes the record a very worthwhile addition to a rap collection. – Marisa Brown

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