The Giancana Story

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Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 55:51

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Hua Hsu

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Hua Hsu edits the hip-hop section of URB Magazine and writes about music, culture and politics for Slate, the Village Voice, The Wire and various other magazine...more »

04.22.11
Kool G Rap, The Giancana Story
2003 | Label: In The Paint / Entertainment One Distribution

After many delays, this long-awaited comeback finally dropped in 2002. Though flawed, it featured enough bullets to remind us of G Rap's hardcore glory days.

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ejr1978

I remember back around 2002 this album kept getting pushed back. When it finally dropped, some of the tracks were missing (to combat the bootleggers) including a really hot track featuring Snoop Dogg and Devin the Dude called "Keep Going" (produced by Hi-Tek). This is a pretty good album still.

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They Say All Music Guide

Delayed for over a year while Rawkus sorted out its increasingly labyrinthine label affiliations (it was eventually licensed to a Koch subsidiary), The Giancana Story proves that time means nothing to one of the greatest rappers ever (though Rawkus took it too far when they declared “the game was named after him”). Don’t call it a comeback because he never left — he recorded continually during the ’90s — but Kool G’s third solo record illustrates the rare case of the hip-hop world moving closer to a veteran than when he made his breakout. What sounded refreshing and genuinely unique in 1990 — check out before-their-time shots like “Road to the Riches” or “Streets of New York” — was becoming nearly ubiquitous by the end of the millennium, and besides slipping in a few more words per line than he used to, the first real hardcore rapper hasn’t changed his style a whit (or needed to). The opener, “Thug for Life,” is as clean a track as any classic golden-age production, but with the type of mid-tempo roll that gets it closer to later hardcore rap. The single “My Life,” with Capone-N-Noreaga, is the best track here, the only one with any crossover appeal (via a remix complete with talk box and stuttered chorus). Everything else is pure hardcore rap, with all the dark intelligence and heavy venom hip-hop fans expect from a master. – John Bush

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