Disposable Arts

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (44 ratings)
Disposable Arts album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 24   Total Length: 73:00

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I gotta agree

calebsmith

with everyone eles. I've had this since it came out on cd and i have loved it ever since. It's alot of tracks but it's worth it to get all the skits and stuff the commecials for IDA and all that it's great. What eles to say...... Great Album!

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Why?

chriscrey

Hey Lordofwar, why don't you like rap? Screw the radio rap. Just go indy and you're straight. Put some digging time in.

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Underrated Album

Lordofwar2508

I dont even like rap but i cant get enough of this album. Its just simply that good.

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Blue skies, sunshine...

qbanis

'Take A Walk' is one of the best songs of all time, any genre. For all those trying to live vicariously through some teenage millionaire rapper, look elsewhere. Ace is the epitome of 'real hip-hop', and every time I listen to this lp I'm reminded of why I love H.E.R. so much.

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They Say All Music Guide

After a six-year period of disillusionment with the rap game, one-time Juice Crew member Masta Ace returned with this supposed sayonara album that reads like a bittersweet memoir. Though Ace had been active in the underground scene since the release of 1995′s Sittin’ on Chrome, appearing on a number of singles and contributing memorable verses to various collaborations, the artist’s disdain for the industry and disgust with his contemporaries kept him out of the studio for lengthy recording sessions. Feeling that rap’s heyday had passed with the deaths of rappers like 2Pac and Biggie, and seeing a media- and market-influenced, watered-down product, Disposable Arts broods with anger, cynicism, and satire for the modern rapper bent purely on trend capitalizing. The paradox here is that Ace himself seems to seek and feels worthy of the same multimillion that he accuses his contemporaries of securing through less-than-artistic means. The burden of underground respect that nets only underground sales seems to be the primary source of Ace’s frustration. While smacking of classic player-hate, Ace’s response for the Cash Money Millionaires and Roc-A-Fellas of hip-hop is: “the rap game’s a book and I read mad chapters/and if you ask me, it ain’t enough Madd Rappers.” Ace enlists a healthy balance of true schoolers (King T and Greg Nice) and eccentric up-and-comers (Punch, Words, and the delightfully weird MC Paul Barman) for the project. Musically, the album offers anything but the disposable; highlights include the eerie narrative “Take a Walk,” the fierce dis record “Acknowledge,” and the ingenious “Alphabet Soup,” where Ace runs through the alphabet with some witty old-school rhymes. More four-alarm flames light up “Something’s Wrong,” the psychedelic “Dear Diary,” and the thumping homage to the West Coast, “P.T.A..” A knockout punchliner with an airtight flow and delivery, Ace, in the face of everything he hates about hip-hop, turns in his most expansively satisfying work. With 24 strong tracks and only faint signs of misstep, Disposable Arts is tightly wrought thematically, musically, and lyrically, not to mention one heck of a parting shot. Most hip-hop albums of the modern era are lucky to cover even one of these areas. – M.F. DiBella

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