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Afro Samurai Soundtrack Album

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Download links and information about Afro Samurai Soundtrack Album by Rza. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Theatre/Soundtrack genres. It contains 25 tracks with total duration of 01:01:46 minutes.

Artist: Rza
Release date: 2007
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Theatre/Soundtrack
Tracks: 25
Duration: 01:01:46
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $9.49

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Afro theme 0:29
2. Afro intro 0:50
3. Certified samurai 3:00
4. "Just a Lil Dude ""who Dat Ovah There""" 3:28
5. Afro's Father Fight 1:23
6. Oh 4:05
7. The walk 4:09
8. Bazooka Fight Inst. 1 0:41
9. Who Is Tha Man 2:33
10. Ninjaman 2:08
11. Cameo afro 2:52
12. Tears of a Samurai 1:28
13. Take Sword Pt. 1 2:47
14. The Empty 7 Theme 3:17
15. Baby 3:40
16. Take Sword Pt. II 4:03
17. Bazooka Fight Inst. II 0:45
18. Fury In My Eyes/revenge 3:56
19. Afro Samurai Theme (first Movement) 1:42
20. Afro Samurai Theme (second Movement) 1:36
21. Insomnia 3:22
22. So fly 2:55
23. We All We Got 1:47
24. Glorious day 3:34
25. Series outro 1:16

Details

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The soundtrack to the anime series Afro Samurai is executive produced and, for the most part, also produced by the RZA, the ideal option to apply hip-hop to Japanese animation. The RZA has always been known for his deep admiration of the martial arts, and he knocked his first scoring opportunity — Ghost Dog, which is best heard on the JVC Japan edition — out of the park. With credits for Kill Bill and Blade Trinity also under his belt, he smoothly transitions into Afro Samurai, composing a hard-hitting intro, several incidental pieces, and a handful of MC-led tracks, with brief appearances from the likes of Big Daddy Kane, GZA, Talib Kweli, Suga Bang, and himself. On Ghost Dog, he worked a sparse, gritty gracefulness; here, the feel is more epic, sleek, and turbulent, with dialogue (including plenty from Samuel L. Jackson as Afro, the protagonist in search of avenging his father's killers) laid over a generous amount of the score material. A pair of nearly torrid, reverb-heavy slow jams come from R&B duo Stone Mecca, who sound somewhat contemporary while owing much to Michael Henderson's and Prince's steamiest falsetto ballads (and that's no gripe). Another outside R&B cut, produced by M1 and featuring vocalist Maurice, is too pleasant and clean-cut to really fit into the flow of the program. As a bonus, or an enticement for RZA fans who might feel skeptical about a project not wholly reliant on RZA and rhymes, four tracks from a future Bobby Digital album are added.