Group Home, Livin' Proof

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2LP - GET ON DOWN
1995 => 2017

40,00 € 40.0 EUR 40,00 € hors TVA

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    TRACKLIST 


    A1. Intro
    A2. Inna Citi Life
    A3. Livin’ Proof
    A4. Serious Rap Shit
    B1. Suspended In Time
    B2. Sacrifice
    B3. Up Against The Wal (Low Budget Mix)
    C1. 4 Give My Sins
    C2. Baby Pa 
    C3. 2 Thousand
    D1. Supa Star
    D2. Up Against Tha Wall (Getaway Car Mix)
    D3. Tha Realness


    DESCRIPTION


    Although they have been tragically defunct for almost two decades, the influence of Gang Starr is still felt today, almost as heavily as it was back in the 1990s, when DJ Premier and Guru ruled atop boom-bap mountain.
    As fans know, beyond the duo’s direct output, one of their lasting legacies was bringing younger talent to the rap world at large – including Jeru The Damaja, M.O.P., Afu-Ra and Big Shug.
    One of the more unsung talents that came out of the Gang Starr Foun- dation was the Brooklyn-based duo Group Home, consisting of MCs Lil Dap and Melachi The Nutcracker. Dap was first showcased on the Gang Starr posse cut “I’m The Man,” on 1992’s Daily Operation; Melachi appeared on “Words From The Nutcracker” from 1993’s Hard To Earn. The early Group Home song “So Called Friends” was also featured on 1993’s now-legendary Gangstarr Foundation Sampler, which also gave the world Jeru’s “Come Clean.”
    By 1995, Dap and Melachi had paid their dues and finally got their own full-length: Livin’ Proof. And it was everything that Gang Starr and any true school hip-hop fans could have wanted, produced almost entirely by DJ Premier (with two exceptions: “Serious Rap Shit” helmed by Guru himself; and “4 Give My Sins,” produced by Jay-Z mentor Jaz-O (aka Big Jazz).
    Beyond the album’s still-jocked commercial singles – “Supa Star,” “Livin’ Proof” and “Suspended In Time” – there are Premier-overseen classics all over, including “The Realness,” “Inna Citi Life,” and “Sac- rifice.” In fact, many Gang Starr scholars agree that the beats on Living Proof are in the Top 5 of all Premier-produced albums – no small boast, but certainly hard to disprove.
    More than two decades later, the album still sounds as strong as it did upon its release. So dust off your turntable and give it another ride, back to the days when boom-bap was real, and ruling.