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Surrounded By Silence

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Download links and information about Surrounded By Silence by Prefuse 73. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Ambient, Electronica, Techno, Industrial, Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Dancefloor, Dance Pop genres. It contains 21 tracks with total duration of 01:00:46 minutes.

Artist: Prefuse 73
Release date: 2005
Genre: Ambient, Electronica, Techno, Industrial, Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Dancefloor, Dance Pop
Tracks: 21
Duration: 01:00:46
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $9.49

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. I've Said All I Need to Say About Them Intro 3:32
2. Hide Ya Face 3:13
3. Bad Memory Interlude One 0:41
4. Ty Versus Detchibe 3:21
5. Expressing Views Is Obviously Illegal 3:41
6. Pastel Assassins 4:26
7. Pagina Dos 2:28
8. Silence Interlude 0:56
9. Now You're Leaving 2:38
10. Gratis 4:51
11. We Got Our Own Way 3:19
12. Mantra 1:05
13. Sabbatical With Options 2:44
14. It's Crowded 4:53
15. Just the Thought 3:37
16. La Correcion Exchange 4:15
17. Hide Ya Face Reminder Version 1:34
18. Morale Crusher 1:13
19. Minutes Away Without You 3:48
20. Rain Edit Interlude 1:36
21. And I'm Gone 2:55

Details

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Scott Herren's first two full-lengths as Prefuse 73 were masterly collisions of wave-your-hand party breaks and stop-time glitch techno. Everything held sacred in the hip-hop playbook — including the rapper — was merely fodder for Herren's processor, and given enough time, he could rearrange an earthy old-school track into a computer-bred monster that would make a master of the jutting sample like Marley Marl sound close to a syrupy G-funk producer in comparison. While Herren's third album down the line could never be the same revolution in sound as his first two, it's a surprise nevertheless to find it downright desultory. With a series of all-star rap features — including three underperforming members from Wu-Tang Clan and three OK contractors from Definitive Jux — Herren's productions serve his guests instead of his own tracks, and the result is very close to just another underground rap record, with the usual collection of untraceable sound detritus to anchor its productions. Several of the instrumentals recapture something of the Prefuse 73 magic, but Herren isn't entirely successful even when in cut-and-splice mode — one track finds him sampling and repeating a series of downright annoying nasalisms from Tyondai Braxton (although the title, "Mantra," furnishes a partial explanation).