Silent Weapons For Quiet Wars

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 17   Total Length: 64:43

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Grimey at a Glitterey Time

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By 1997 Wu Tang clan was getting pretty a little bit lame. Wu-Tang Forever was shamefully promoted with all kinds of cornball gimmicks (If you got your parents permission, you could call 1-900 numbers with pre-recorded messages from each member! Just like N'Sync!). They were still making good music, but I found it hard to listen to a lot of their shit at the time with all the frat boy types wearing Wu-Wear etc. etc. etc. The guys in Killa Army were lyrically inferior, but the beats by 4th Disciple were ridiculous, and you werenâ??t going to see Killa Sin doing a cameo on some UPN sitcom. At the time Killa Army was filling a void for me.

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They Say All Media Guide

The fact that Killarmy’s debut Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars was co-released on Wu-Tang Records suggests that the hardcore crew is part of the Wu-Tang Clan. In reality, the group has more in common with Master P’s legion of ripoff artists on No Limit, the label that co-released Silent Weapons. Killarmy is a low-rent Wu-Tang, approximating some of the spare, haunting menace of RZA’s productions, but without the tough, clever raps that make Wu-Tang so distinctive. Unlike many imitations, Killarmy is actually enjoyable — several of the tracks have catchy, noisy hooks and beats, and the group’s rhymes have potential. Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars is too long to make a large impact — especially since they repeat many of their best ideas over the course of the record — but when its consumed in small doses, it’s quite enjoyable. – Leo Stanley

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