Dillanthology, Vol. 3
Download links and information about Dillanthology, Vol. 3 by J Dilla. This album was released in 2009 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 47:04 minutes.
Artist: | J Dilla |
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Release date: | 2009 |
Genre: | Hip Hop/R&B, Rap |
Tracks: | 14 |
Duration: | 47:04 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | WorkinOnIt | 2:59 |
2. | Pause (featuring Dee Jay) | 2:46 |
3. | Raw S**t (featuring Jaylib) | 3:10 |
4. | Nothing Like This | 2:36 |
5. | Anti-American Graffiti | 1:57 |
6. | Glamour Sho75 (09) | 3:04 |
7. | Won't Do | 3:47 |
8. | Baby (feat. Madlib & Guilty Simpson) | 3:31 |
9. | It's Like That (featuring Dee Jay) | 4:07 |
10. | Off Ya Chest (feat. Frank-n-Dank) (featuring Dee Jay) | 3:18 |
11. | Crushin' | 3:44 |
12. | Reality Check (feat. Black Thought) | 2:42 |
13. | Featuring Phat Kat (featuring Dee Jay) | 3:45 |
14. | So Far to Go (feat. Common & D'Angelo) | 5:38 |
Details
[Edit]If any of the three Dillanthology discs seemed particularly early upon arrival, it was the third volume — the one focused on Dilla's own releases. Over half of its material comes from releases that were, at the time, no older than three-and-a-half years. In fact, two tracks — "Glamour Sho75 (09)" and "Reality Check," off Jay Stay Paid — were barely four months old. Plenty of other questions could be lobbed at the set: why couldn't "F**k the Police," a rugged single released in 2001, be licensed for this? Why break up Donuts, a beat-suite masterpiece that should be heard in whole? There's no denying, however, that Dillanthology is effective — more like a sampler, really — at showcasing the late producer/MC's range. For "Pause," one of three tracks from 2001's Welcome 2 Detroit, Dilla needed little more than a simple kick-drum pattern, fingersnaps, and light atmospheric effects. "Nothin' Like This" is psychedelic hard rock, oddly phased and shifted, made all the more swirling with Dilla's voice echoed heavily to the point of sounding disembodied. Then there's the liquid soul of "Won't Do," where Dilla flips the Isley Brothers — an obvious sample source made to sound novel — and dishes out some vocal-hook hypnosis of his own.