The Cold Vein

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (377 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
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Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 73:48

eMusic Review

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Jess Harvell

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Underground hip-hop's grimy ground zero.
2001 | Label: Definitive Jux / The Orchard

Cannibal Ox's The Cold Vein blew indie hip-hop wide open in 2001, collapsing the false distinction between “street” and “backpack” rap way before Kanye (and with way different results). Vast Aire and Vordul combined Raekwon's airtight, stressed-out crime dramas with crackpot Egyptology (“Pigeon”), Marvel Comics pulp (“Battle for Asgard,” possibly the first time African-American rappers referenced Norse mythology) and even a little emo (“The F-Word”). But for all the duo's rhyme virtuosity and brutalist detail — “You was a stillborn baby/ Your mother didn't want you/ But you were still born/ Boy meets world/ Of course his pops is gone” — it was El-P's production that really flipped conservative indie wigs and garnered the duo attention outside of the rap world. At the same time that producers like Swizz Beatz were using high-gloss Casio keyboards to start the party, El-P was power sanding his beats and soaking his hooks in brine. El fashioned a wheezing machinefunk full of biting synth winds blowing through subway stops and sonic quotes from Wall of Voodoo's “Mexican Radio.” The end result was a grimy classic of 21st-century NYC hip-hop that kicked off El's well-regarded Def Jux imprint and that both rappers and… read more »

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This Album Will Ruin Your Life

emo.kids.have.no.feelings

It's hard to get up in the morning these days, because I know that no matter what happens, no one will ever again put out an album as good as The Cold Vein.

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give it some spin

einar.aslaksen

To me this is one of the greatest hip hop albums ever. The record needs some time to sink but it is definately worth every second

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Best Album of all time

MetalFaceBrewery

Front to back without skipping a track everytime for 8 years now. The perfect album

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Amazing

vacuumtensorequalszero

The only thing bad about this album is that Cannibal Ox didn't release another one.

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Joseph+mary= holy F*#K!

mandela

this album is Incredible! lyrics, production, it's shockingly good.

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Slow burn

svenforner

I agree that glorybox is perhaps a little harsh where this album is concerned. I love it, but nothing hooked me on the first listen besides iron galaxy, vein and straight off the d.i.c. If you do get this record, make sure you put in some effort on the first couple spins. You'll be glad you did, and maybe you'll see how silly it is to write it off after just one.

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Out your mind...

Roleoneaux

'Glorywhateveryourname' had his mind sucked out after sticking 'it' in a glory hole, and is now incapable of offering opinions of value. I bought this album in 2001, it was ground-breaking then, with original self-made beats, and a delivery of lyrics that couldn't be bettered by a UPS man of the year, and still amazes me seven years later. If you do not like this album, you do not know hip-hop for what it truly is. Five MEGA stars. Thanks 'Ox'.

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Awesome

jdcrosse22

that guy is an idiot that doesn't like this...he probably like 50 cent and his sweet rhymes...lol....these are some awesome lyrics....the little clips dont do him justice

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They Say All Media Guide

While it can be said that many underground crews have been floundering in the gray matter of indie hip-hop, Cannibal Ox filled that area in with 2001′s The Cold Vein for El P’s Def Jux imprint. The music press had been quick to point out that Vast Aire and Vordul Megilah’s attack is at times highly derivative of the Wu Tang Clan, and the point is valid. Thankfully, El P (a serious candidate for producer of the year) lays out some of the most lushly intriguing sounds and beats that feel as herky-jerky as they sound gilded with silk. It’s a bit misleading to harp on the Wu factor that The Cold Vein contains since this record’s content is immensely original and the Wu references that seem present are in the enlightened gloomy flow and psychedelic backdrops — not, (with all due respect) in the kitschy hooks and unfocused rhymes that Wu Tang are also known for. Aire and Megilah swirl around in b-boy posturing and obtuse nonsense as their innovation rears its head at every corner with scatter-shot lines like: “And I ain’t dealin’ with no minimum wage/I’d rather construct rhymes on a minimum page,” and “You were a still-born baby, your mother didn’t want you but you were still-born.” While there’s not a throwaway track per se, the album’s length does run a bit long (at least they didn’t make it into a double CD as a lot of rap acts have been known to do). To their immense credit, Cannibal Ox and El P have assembled one of the most listenable hip-hop albums in far too long. Headz be aware: Independent hip-hop has a new voice and this is your beat fix for 2001. – Sam Samuelson

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