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The King of Everything Else

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Download links and information about The King of Everything Else by Slaine. This album was released in 2014 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap genres. It contains 17 tracks with total duration of 59:03 minutes.

Artist: Slaine
Release date: 2014
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Rap
Tracks: 17
Duration: 59:03
Buy on iTunes $10.99
Buy on Amazon $10.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. No Handouts 2:07
2. Destroy Everything 3:59
3. Bobby Be Real (feat.Tech N9ne & Madchild) 3:35
4. Dot Ave (featuring Rite Hook) 2:58
5. Back Against the Wall (featuring Moroney & Rite Hook) 3:22
6. Dopehead (feat. Jaysaun) 3:39
7. Pissed It All Away 3:38
8. The Years 3:15
9. Hip Hop Dummy (feat. Bishop Lamont & Apathy) 3:30
10. Children of the Revolution (feat. Ill Bill) 3:34
11. The Most Dangerous Drug in the World 3:23
12. Come Back Down (feat. Vinnie Paz, Checkmark & Regan Hartley) 3:49
13. Zip Zero (feat. Reks & Termanology) 4:32
14. Our Moment 3:10
15. Defiance (feat. Rite Hook) 3:30
16. To the Light (Bonus Track) 3:02
17. Gettin' High (feat. Demrick) [Bonus Track] 4:00

Details

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"Oh woe is me" is the attitude of "No Handouts," the opening number on Slaine's album The King of Everything Else. "It does nuthin' for me, suckin' off the blunts/I need two bitches, now, to suck me off at once" is the hard-knock life this jaded Boston brute and La Coka Nostra member lives, and while that snotty attitude and the Suburban Noize logo rotating around the spindle both spray good-taste repellent out of the speakers, the dude's got a wild style and a musical edge that's unexpected. Late album highlight "Zip Zero" features a sampled accordion, or it might even be a bandoneon, for some concertina-driven tango-hop that can't be found anywhere else, but this ain't all the new orquesta típica, since the beat on the great "Bobby Be Real" is old vaudeville music crossed with ICP's dark carnival rap-rock. "Dopehead" comes with plenty of brilliant putdowns Kevin Hart could crib ("Nuthin' worse in this world than a dopehead/Up with the birds chirping, calling Lopez") along with a vocoder-driven hook that sticks to the bones, then the unique "The Most Dangerous Drug in the World" touches upon reentering the dating scene and being surprised by how freaky sex has gotten while Slaine was stuck behind that white picket fence. Too stuffed and too scattered keeps this one off the top shelf, but the clever and fun album succeeds in the same way Devin the Dude LPs serve their party purpose.