Adventures In Emceein

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Adventures In Emceein album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 21   Total Length: 60:34

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it is classic you will enjoy

EMUSIC-01E8E6DB

i have to say how i admire the way he keeps hip-hop classics alive. keeping it clean and understandable as it was back in the days. if he reads this thank you from a fellow bronxster

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All rappers either preach or brag!

kelvin_pierce31

KRS-One, in my opinion,is what hip-hop needs. In this album he enlightens ignorant people to the facts of how hip-hop today has become the new form of Black exploitation. How commercial radio stations only have interest in menstrual Show Rappers. Rappers glorifying prostitution,drug selling, senseless violence are preaching self-destruction to listeners. Mostly young listeners! Young listeners have started living the life that they hear about in these reckless rap songs. Very negative brainwashing effect. Thank goodness for independent labels and all their true talented hip-hop artist who never sold out! Because of them I still love hip-hop.

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eMusic Features

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KRS-One, Scott La Rock and B-Boy Records

By Hua Hsu, eMusic Contributor

Before they were legends, they were just two dejected young men trying to get back to the Bronx. In 1986, nobody was checking for Boogie Down Productions, another of the seemingly endless queue of aspiring would-be rappers and party-animators who blanketed New York City. KRS-One and DJ Scott La Rock - names that would become part of hip-hop history by year's end - were just two guys named Kris Parker and Scott Sterling. Kris was the… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Midway through KRS-One’s Adventures in Emceein, Nas (often the torch-bearer for much of KRS-One’s preaching) calls KRS “the greatest MC of all time” and repeats that designation for posterity’s sake. It’s hard to argue with Nas, considering KRS-One’s unmatched longevity, much of which has been characterized by relevance and excellence. Nas appears at the opening of “The Real Hiphop” — a subject that is the hallmark of practically every KRS recording. Just like every other album over the past 20 or so years — especially the recent ones — Adventures in Emceein deals with the preservation of hip-hop and the necessity of teaching, or as KRS puts it on “What’s Your Plan?,” “All I’m trying to do is educate the young ones.” The result is a series of largely static songs that, although they spring from an inspired artist incessantly motivated with the notion of the greater good, will probably bore most listeners. There is affecting production in spots (“I Got You”) and KRS seems immune to serving up garbage rhymes, with the social critique of “Our Soldiers” highlighting the substance void of both music and political talking heads. Still, many of the songs sound like recycled KRS stock. Some are downright corny, such as “Alright.” Yeah, it’s always nice to hear, arguably, the greatest to ever do it, but it’s become increasingly less of an event. – Vincent Thomas

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