Runaway Slave

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (58 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 69:50

eMusic Review

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Sean Fennessey

eMusic Contributor

Sean Fennessey is the editor of GQ.com. He is a former Director of Merchandising at eMusic and has written about music and culture for Spin, Rolling Stone, The ...more »

01.24.07
Bedrock New York hip-hop that drew up the blueprint
Label: Show Records

There aren't many unheralded East Coast classic rap albums left to praise. But while New York's glorious early ’90s run remains a pillar of nostalgic vampirism, celebration has strangely eluded Showbiz & A.G. The Bronx duo (Show produces, A.G. rhymes) are responsible for bedrock songs so rigidly and perfectly constructed they now resemble clichés. But they're not — Show and Andre the Giant helped infuse bop and rhythm into hip-hop's DNA, and songs like "40 Acres and My Props" are as resonant as anything on Illmatic or The Infamous.

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speechless

Bobuar

this duo never broke like Black Sheep or Tribe, but the mainstream definitely missed out on one of the best hiphop albums ever in my opinion.

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950's SP12's MP60's

Svend-G

If you like the sound of New York then this is it. Dirty beats and gritty rap make up this long forgotten classic. and hey! You get the "Party Groove" instrumental

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Absolute classic!

GarciaStudios.com

D.I.T.C. in effect! Showbiz on the boards and A.G. on the mic! From back in the day of the Renaissance of Hip-Hop! Must have!

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Cold Classic

PoorLilRichBoy

Classic. Show & AG at their best. The beats, the flow, and the message are above par. A DITC fave.

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diggin in the crates

PBdrew

Classic! Still diggin in the crates-

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They Say All Media Guide

A product of the tightknit Bronx underground posse D.I.T.C., Runaway Slave is a cornerstone album of hip-hop’s middle school phase. Building on and borrowing from the layered, jazz-influenced sound of such contemporaries as Gang Starr and Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth, Showbiz & A.G. affixed a gangster mentality to grainy, fortified beats, etching their own unique style. While the crossover “Soul Clap” and “Party Groove” are club cuts, the rest of the album is more densely expressive. Showbiz and his talented peer Diamond shape their beats around simple, deep drum tracks — but add subtle loops of chaotic horns, loose strings, or abrupt piano notes to create concise and hard-hitting overtures. Tasteful flute swatches light up “Silence of the Lambs,” an ear-ringing saxophone buzzes on “Still Diggin’,” and the motor mouthed late legend Big L introduced himself on the classic down-the-line jam “Represent,” pulling such punchlines as “MCs be braggin’ about cash they collect/But them chumps is like Ray Charles ’cause they ain’t seen no money yet.” The young A.G. (aka Andre the Giant) flows effortlessly throughout this album, an MC whose skill and unique voice would only mature in the future. While some of the import of this album is muted by modern-day technological sound booth advancements, Showbiz & A.G. did it raw and undiluted and the resulting sound was fresh, innovative, and most of all satisfying for hip-hop heads. – M.F. DiBella

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