all mf doom albums nehruviandoom album download Czarface Meets Metal Face. Since 2013, Boston rap duo 7L & Esoteric and Wu-Tang Clan member Inspectah Deck have been making explosive, action-packed albums inspired by comics and Saturday morning cartoons, loaded with sinister sound bites and funky, cinematic production. The project's namesake character, Czarface, is a superhero on a mission to save hip-hop, illustrated in Marvel-style graphics by New York-based artist Lamour Supreme. This concept isn't far off from the territory that MF Doom has been covering since the late '90s, so perhaps it was inevitable that the two parties would clash at some point. Three years after Doom's brief cameo on Czarface's Every Hero Needs a Villain, the iron-masked villain confronts the savior for a full-length go-round. Instead of being an epic battle, however, the album ends up feeling more like a casual, relaxed get-together between several life-long fanatics of both hip-hop and comics. This is most readily apparent on tracks like "Captain Crunch" (later reprised as "Captain Brunch"), which is loaded with pop culture namedrops ranging from Dave Brubeck to Boba Fett, and "Don't Spoil It," a brief mash note to hip-hop's golden age. Perhaps the most sinister track is "Phantom," which begins with a glitchy, Dabrye-esque beat and a calmly paced guest verse from Open Mike Eagle, before switching to a darker, more noir-ish second half. Skits like "Close Talker" draw out a conflict between Czarface and Doom, but the former seems to be a bit more aggressive -- Doom doesn't really seem to fight back, he's just doing his thing, talking sharp and candid like always. In any case, the album is still a whole lot of fun, and shouldn't disappoint fans of either act. Stream Top Podcasts. If you can never get enough true crime. Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. This is what the news should sound like. The biggest stories of our time, told by the best journalists in the world. Hosted by Michael Barbaro. Twenty minutes a day, five days a week, ready by 6 a.m. Featured Podcasts. Dr. Death Season 3: Miracle Man. Paolo is a smart and handsome surgeon, renowned for his ability to perform surgeries that transform his patients’ lives. When television producer Benita covers him for a story, he’ll transform her life too, but not in the ways she expects. As Benita crosses professional lines to be with him, she learns how far Paolo will go to protect his secrets. And halfway around the world, four doctors at a prestigious medical institute make shocking discoveries of their own that call everything into question. From Wondery comes Season Three of the hit podcast, Dr. Death. 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I watched in awe from my home while this simple phrase from Untamed – WE CAN DO HARD THINGS – the mantra that saved my life twenty years ago, became a worldwide rally cry. Because we experienced the hardship of the pandemic collectively, many of us finally acknowledged what was true before COVID and will be true after: That life is freaking HARD. We are all doing hard things every single day – things like loving and losing caring for children and parents; forging and ending friendships; battling addiction, illness, and loneliness; struggling in our jobs, our marriages, and our divorces; setting boundaries; and fighting for equality, purpose, freedom, joy, and peace. On We Can Do Hard Things, my sister Amanda and I will do the only thing I’ve found that has ever made life easier: We will drop the fake and talk honestly about the hard. Each week we will bring our hard to you and we will ask you to bring your hard to us and we will do what we were all meant to do down here: Help each other carry the hard so we can all live a little bit lighter and braver, more free and less alone. Born Like This. After MF Doom spent a few years off record (and maybe off stage, if the impostor rumors are true), fans were ready for another classic from the man who never met a bar he couldn't tack four extra syllables onto. And as if expectations couldn't be ratcheted any higher, the album included a few productions from Dilla and Madlib alongside Doom himself, plus features for a quartet of legendary compatriots (Ghostface, Raekwon, Bumpy Knuckles aka Freddie Foxxx, and Slug from Atmosphere). Still, it's hard to stifle the disappointment. Doom hasn't changed a whit, but by the same token, he sounds like he's repeating himself. Deft diction is one thing he's got in spades, but there aren't many lines here that will get burned into your neurons. The productions are dense and dark as usual, but Doom's unrelenting lyrical flow has reached some kind of endpoint where he can't torture his internal rhymes any more without just repeating "how now brown cow" for three minutes on end. Even more unfortunately, the best production by Doom is the homophobic "Batty Boyz," and Ghostface, on his lone feature, does little more than obsess over Charlie's Angels. (Their other contemporary collaboration, "Chinatown Wars," is tragically nowhere to be heard here.) Doom may still be among the best purveyors of absurdist metaphysical fantasies in hip-hop since Jeru the Damaja, but Born Like This is a back-to-reality call. NehruvianDOOM (REDUX) Scrobbling is when Last.fm tracks the music you listen to and automatically adds it to your music profile. Recent Listening Trend. Day Listeners Thursday 11 February 2021 213 Friday 12 February 2021 216 Saturday 13 February 2021 197 Sunday 14 February 2021 171 Monday 15 February 2021 201 Tuesday 16 February 2021 194 Wednesday 17 February 2021 186 Thursday 18 February 2021 172 Friday 19 February 2021 196 Saturday 20 February 2021 180 Sunday 21 February 2021 195 Monday 22 February 2021 217 Tuesday 23 February 2021 231 Wednesday 24 February 2021 188 Thursday 25 February 2021 183 Friday 26 February 2021 193 Saturday 27 February 2021 180 Sunday 28 February 2021 177 Monday 1 March 2021 197 Tuesday 2 March 2021 194 Wednesday 3 March 2021 188 Thursday 4 March 2021 168 Friday 5 March 2021 173 Saturday 6 March 2021 178 Sunday 7 March 2021 170 Monday 8 March 2021 166 Tuesday 9 March 2021 158 Wednesday 10 March 2021 153 Thursday 11 March 2021 169 Friday 12 March 2021 163 Saturday 13 March 2021 162 Sunday 14 March 2021 118 Monday 15 March 2021 151 Tuesday 16 March 2021 161 Wednesday 17 March 2021 188 Thursday 18 March 2021 189 Friday 19 March 2021 173 Saturday 20 March 2021 178 Sunday 21 March 2021 186 Monday 22 March 2021 204 Tuesday 23 March 2021 191 Wednesday 24 March 2021 198 Thursday 25 March 2021 230 Friday 26 March 2021 184 Saturday 27 March 2021 58 Sunday 28 March 2021 143 Monday 29 March 2021 195 Tuesday 30 March 2021 192 Wednesday 31 March 2021 208 Thursday 1 April 2021 200 Friday 2 April 2021 191 Saturday 3 April 2021 190 Sunday 4 April 2021 186 Monday 5 April 2021 181 Tuesday 6 April 2021 218 Wednesday 7 April 2021 189 Thursday 8 April 2021 184 Friday 9 April 2021 175 Saturday 10 April 2021 171 Sunday 11 April 2021 179 Monday 12 April 2021 193 Tuesday 13 April 2021 179 Wednesday 14 April 2021 173 Thursday 15 April 2021 200 Friday 16 April 2021 202 Saturday 17 April 2021 157 Sunday 18 April 2021 170 Monday 19 April 2021 163 Tuesday 20 April 2021 174 Wednesday 21 April 2021 181 Thursday 22 April 2021 161 Friday 23 April 2021 164 Saturday 24 April 2021 153 Sunday 25 April 2021 175 Monday 26 April 2021 185 Tuesday 27 April 2021 173 Wednesday 28 April 2021 183 Thursday 29 April 2021 161 Friday 30 April 2021 204 Saturday 1 May 2021 183 Sunday 2 May 2021 189 Monday 3 May 2021 194 Tuesday 4 May 2021 197 Wednesday 5 May 2021 183 Thursday 6 May 2021 222 Friday 7 May 2021 208 Saturday 8 May 2021 184 Sunday 9 May 2021 134 Monday 10 May 2021 178 Tuesday 11 May 2021 160 Wednesday 12 May 2021 179 Thursday 13 May 2021 173 Friday 14 May 2021 157 Saturday 15 May 2021 148 Sunday 16 May 2021 174 Monday 17 May 2021 149 Tuesday 18 May 2021 157 Wednesday 19 May 2021 172 Thursday 20 May 2021 166 Friday 21 May 2021 144 Saturday 22 May 2021 154 Sunday 23 May 2021 145 Monday 24 May 2021 145 Tuesday 25 May 2021 141 Wednesday 26 May 2021 167 Thursday 27 May 2021 160 Friday 28 May 2021 152 Saturday 29 May 2021 145 Sunday 30 May 2021 149 Monday 31 May 2021 144 Tuesday 1 June 2021 175 Wednesday 2 June 2021 163 Thursday 3 June 2021 161 Friday 4 June 2021 190 Saturday 5 June 2021 176 Sunday 6 June 2021 164 Monday 7 June 2021 161 Tuesday 8 June 2021 171 Wednesday 9 June 2021 179 Thursday 10 June 2021 190 Friday 11 June 2021 140 Saturday 12 June 2021 166 Sunday 13 June 2021 169 Monday 14 June 2021 182 Tuesday
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