![]() But it’s Sid Roams’ ability to craft beats that possess the feel of the 1980s, that makes this record so memorable. The colorful artwork combining science-fiction, Hollywood and videogame influences are a mile away from the deadly serious, intimidating album covers Mobb Deep is known for. The lack of a real childhood creeps into “Product of the 80s” as if the fascination with the 1980s holds experiences that Prodigy missed out on. Years in the industry haven’t warmed P or softened him at all, with some glimpses into why the Queens icon is how he is. But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it.' This passage causes some to question the goodness of God. For wide is the gate and broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it. This vicious mindset shows that thirteen years later, he might be thirty-two but his mind is colder. In Matthew 7:1314, Jesus said, 'Enter through the narrow gate. Wrapped up in a nostalgic, synth-driven soundtrack, P is in the type of mood Tony Montana is before he got high on his own supply. Just as Havoc’s haunting style of production filled “The Infamous” and “Hell on Earth” with dread and depression, “Product of the 80s” is full-blown Scarface. ![]() Nonetheless, this record has its moments and any fan of Prodigy should have it in their collection. Is it a Prodigy album? Is it actually 80s-themed? The cover suggests it’s the trio of P, Pacino, and Twins but in reality, Prodigy holds down 60% of the record on his own. Granted, there are stone-cold classic LPs in the Mobb Deep canon, and an argument for Prodigy’s “HNIC” and “Albert Einstein” too, so an 80s-themed album from Sid Roams with secondary roles for frequent collaborators Un Pacino and Big Twins does lend “Product of the 80s” a confusing role in Prodigy’s catalog. With the aim to review as much rap as possible, there are inevitably gaps in the RapReviews database, so occasionally we will go “Back to the Lab” and cover a record that’s not current. Second of all, apologies to any readers that may be wondering why we are covering an eleven-year-old Prodigy record. Bumpy Road is a track by Destruction Unit from the album Deep Trip released in 2013. Endlessly quotable, haunting delivery and a life full of pain support his iconic status, but his catalog is much more than just being one half of Mobb Deep. ![]() For starters, they have existed for a decade, but it is only within the last. guy who came here by force knows what I do.There are estimated to be tens of thousands of dark creatures and alien bad roots that died in my hands.He even told me that my father is XX and I am something.Think about it. I've been requested to comment in this subreddit.“This is for my peoples that were born in the ‘80s” – Prodigyįirst of all, Rest in Peace to Prodigy, one of the finest emcees to grace the microphone. Destruction Unit are not a conventional band. Lastfm listeners: 5,377, lastfm plays: 56,736, youtube plays: 48, score: 7 Garagepunk, punkrock, synthpunk, psychedelic, punk, psychedelicpunk ( more on last.fm)įinal Solutions, Nervous Patterns, Lost Sounds, Terror Visions, Digital Leather ![]() With guitars that were distorted beyond belief and acted more as auxiliary noise machines than instruments" (Transmission Entertainment) and "Suicide-meets-Chrome-meets-Hawkwind-meets-Screamers-meets-the-killer-last-scene-reveals-in-all-the-alien-episodes-of-The. Having built a reputation for terrorizing crowds with sheer noise power and reckless behavior, they have been described as "a band who felt more like a horror movie than a band. Being the brainchild of Ryan Rousseau (Reatards, The Wongs, Tokyo Electron), Destruction Unit is a Sonoran Desert based psychedelic noise punk band.
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