King's Disease II
Download links and information about King's Disease II by Nas. This album was released in 2021 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap genres. It contains 15 tracks with total duration of 51:25 minutes.
Artist: | Nas |
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Release date: | 2021 |
Genre: | Hip Hop/R&B, Rap |
Tracks: | 15 |
Duration: | 51:25 |
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Buy on iTunes $7.99 | |
Buy on Songswave €1.45 |
Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | The Pressure | 0:00 |
2. | Death Row East | 3:07 |
3. | 40 Side | 6:27 |
4. | EPMD 2 (feat. Eminem & EPMD) | 9:07 |
5. | Rare | 12:41 |
6. | YKTV (feat. A Boogie wit da Hoodie & YG) | 16:07 |
7. | Store Run | 19:30 |
8. | Moments | 22:49 |
9. | Nobody (feat. Ms. Lauryn Hill) | 27:00 |
10. | No Phony Love (feat. Charlie Wilson) | 31:42 |
11. | Brunch on Sundays (feat. Blxst) | 34:47 |
12. | Count Me In | 38:38 |
13. | Composure (feat. Hit-Boy) | 41:55 |
14. | My Bible | 45:18 |
15. | Nas is Good | 49:06 |
Details
[Edit]
If the first King’s Disease project was Nas reveling in the legacy he’d sown over three-plus decades in the game, its sequel—arriving just short of a year later—is the legendary MC settling that much further into what he thinks great rap should sound like in 2021. In this case, that’s another full-length project co-executive-produced by celebrated Fontana, California-hailing beatsmith Hit-Boy, this time featuring a handful of eyebrow-raising moments like the pairing of hip-hop legends EPMD and Eminem (“EPMD 2”), a revisitation of the static—and eventual reconciliation—he shared with 2Pac (“Death Row East”), and a brand-new rap verse from the illustrious Ms. Lauryn Hill (“Nobody”). Not unlike its predecessor, King’s Disease II features a small handful of guests, something Nas saw fit to acknowledge in rhyme on “Moments”: “My whole career I steered away from features/But I figured it’s perfect timing to embrace the leaders.” While that first statement is a bit of revisionist history, we won’t pretend that sharing airspace with the don hasn’t always been—and isn’t still—something of an honor, one he’s chosen to bestow here upon A Boogie wit da Hoodie, YG, and Hit-Boy. He contextualizes this particularly well toward that same song’s end, reminding us of his impact when he cites “moments you can’t relive/Like your first time bugging from something that Nas said.”