Build and Destroy
Download links and information about Build and Destroy by Royce Da 5'9 ". This album was released in 2003 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap genres. It contains 36 tracks with total duration of 01:57:04 minutes.
Artist: | Royce Da 5'9 " |
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Release date: | 2003 |
Genre: | Hip Hop/R&B, Rap |
Tracks: | 36 |
Duration: | 01:57:04 |
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Buy on iTunes Partial Album |
Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | 59 Intro | 0:07 |
2. | We're Live | 3:40 |
3. | Scary Movies (The Sequel) | 3:26 |
4. | Take His Life Feat. Tre | 3:38 |
5. | It's Over | 2:22 |
6. | I Won't Be | 3:03 |
7. | Spit Game (G.T.A. Mix) | 3:26 |
8. | Nuttin' to Do Feat. Eminem | 3:42 |
9. | R.A.W. Feat. Checkmate, Concise & DJ Revolution | 4:02 |
10. | Knuckle Up Feat. Hush | 3:21 |
11. | What the Beat Feat. Method Man & Eminem | 3:02 |
12. | Stretch Armstrong Freestyles | 3:23 |
13. | I'm the King | 3:08 |
14. | Let's Grow | 3:09 |
15. | Tony Touch Freestyle | 1:23 |
16. | Make This Run | 5:00 |
17. | Feel Good Feat. Pharrell & Tre Little | 4:16 |
18. | King of Kings | 3:46 |
19. | All I Wanna Do | 3:25 |
20. | In the Presence of Wolves | 4:10 |
21. | King of Detroit | 4:04 |
22. | Malcolm X (D12 Dis) | 5:37 |
23. | What We Do (D12 Dis) | 2:15 |
24. | Heartbeat | 3:10 |
25. | Trouble Feat. Bow Tie & Polar Bear | 4:27 |
26. | Take Me Away | 3:14 |
27. | Life Goes On | 3:11 |
28. | Duck Down | 2:35 |
29. | Death Day | 2:02 |
30. | Freestyle | 2:19 |
31. | We Riding | 2:12 |
32. | Running | 3:05 |
33. | Lights Out Feat. DJ Ody Roc | 2:36 |
34. | You Don't Know Me | 3:36 |
35. | S**t On You | 3:34 |
36. | War | 3:38 |
Details
[Edit]Royce da 5'9" went through a lot of drama during the early 2000s, much of it to the detriment of his career and to the dismay of his fan base. His excellent debut album, Rock City, was continually delayed — and finally released with barely any marketing push at all, courtesy of rap industry discount wholesaler Koch Records — and a beef with the fellow Detroit-based Shady Records posse led to an attempted character assassination. Despite all the drama, however, Royce soldiered on and cleaned out his closet with Build & Destroy: The Lost Sessions, Pt. 1, a mixtape-style odds-and-ends collection with a remarkable number of excellent tracks. In fact, there's enough excellence here for a brief full-length if Royce would have trimmed away some of the superfluousness and given the album a greater sense of continuity (by, say, adding some interludes or a couple more new productions). Regardless, Build & Destroy is a treasure trove as it stands, housing a wealth of Royce's fiery rhymes (including the album-closing "Malcom X," his fearless shot at the Shady camp — and yes, he even takes aim at 50 Cent) and productions by some of the industry's top beatmakers circa 2003: Just Blaze ("King of Detroit"), Kanye West ("Heartbeat"), the Alchemist ("I Won't Be," "Danger"), and the Neptunes ("Feels Good," "Make This Run"). It's really too bad Royce didn't have better affiliations — he's incredibly talented and deserves twice the recognition he'd gotten to date, yet in the ultracompetitive commercial rap industry, it's essential to have strong label backing if you want to break through the clutter. Then again, he seems to relish his rebellious, almost-kamikaze underdog persona. He's a rapper in an unfortunate predicament, for sure, and thus someone you have to accept on whatever terms he's presented. In the case of Build & Destroy, Royce is presented in somewhat of a hodgepodge nature, yet if you don't mind parsing the album, there are delights aplenty to be had. [The German edition of Build & Destroy: The Lost Sessions, Pt. 1, released by Groove Attack, expands to double-disc size and totally shuffles the track order. Some of the better tracks on the standard edition, like "Duck Down" and "I Won't Be," are sadly missing though. Regardless, there's a lot of hard to find tracks here, most of which are underground mixtape recordings, so completists should definitely take note.]