Ghostface Killah - More Fish. More Fish marks thesecond release from Ghostface thisyear on Def Jam, a label that has astable of gifted artists' lying in wait. There is no doubt that Ghost is incredibly accomplished in hiscraft and the release of Fishscaleearlier this year cemented the Staten Island natives' place in the halls of "Best. Ofs" for 2. 00. 6. More Fishfeatures Theodore.
Put It On The Line Ghostface Rar Files
. Ghostface Killah & Trife Da God - Put It On The Line (2005).rar Size: 53.47 MB Uploaded: 13-05-2015 00:36 Last download: 16-03-2016 19:32. Advertisement. Zippyshare.com News. and the first update of 2015 is behind us. In November 2005, Ghostface and Theodore Unit's breakout star Trife Da God released a joint project, Put It On The Line. Ghostface Killah. Ghost Face Killah, or abbreviated GFK) Ghostface (shortened stage name during. . _Killah-Archives_Inc.-EP-2003 http:// Ghostface_Killah. Money-Put_it_on_the_Line_Vinyl. Ghostface Ghostface_Killah-Best_of. Ghostface Killah - More Fish. December 15, 2006 | 1:34 AM. by dgoodson. 4.0. Ghostface has pushed Theodore Unit and Trife Da God in past, with official mixtapes 718 and Put it On the Line respectively. Trife.
Unit and Ghostface, but it's hard to find the fine line between thetwo. Standing strong after 1. Ghost still has the Wu work ethic; he's teaching his younger crewof emcees how do it and showing no signs of slowing up himself. Ghostface has pushed Theodore Unit and Trife Da God in past, with official mixtapes 7. Put it On the Linerespectively. Trife, of course, wasalso heavily featured on Fishscale aswell. Given that they are released in the same year and bare such a similarname, there will be no shortage of comparisons between More Fish and Fishscale. The difference with More Fish lies inthe inherent storytelling nature of every Ghostfacealbum.
While on Fishscale, hedocumented his successes, failures and the distractions he found while movingthat Peruvian Fishscale. On More. Fish, his stories continue, but Ghostfaceshows his breadth over the industry as he seamlessly moves from track to track,story to story while taking some chances in other areas he's not usually knownfor. His talent may be genetic. His son, Sun God, is featured prominently on two tracks shows no signs ofweakness, especially on the red hot father- son collabo, "Street Opera."The album features a few veterans of the industry; Cappadonna stands alongside Theodore Unit brethren Trife Da God on the out- of- control MF DOOM- produced- gem, "Guns N'Razors,"which uses a sample from an old Spider- Mancartoon. Another Def Jam artistlast seen on a milk- box, Redman isfeatured on the hilarious Anthony Acid- produced"Greedy Bitches," with a much- improved and almost impressive Shawn Wigs. The production on thealbum includes many of the producers he's been working with as of late, but the.
Adrian Younge Presents: Twelve Reasons to Die II (Deluxe) [Explicit] Ghostface Killah. It's unbelievable how much great work Ghostface has put in over the last two years. This might be better than the original.
Put It On The Line Ghostface Rare
RZA drought continues as the hypefor Raekwon's. OB4. CL2 rises. MF DOOMbeats with Ghostface work perfectly,giving many a preview of their upcoming album Swift & Changeable, but J- Love, Mark Ronson, Hassan aka 'Phantom of the Beats' (another.
Staten Island native) from UMC's,do their best to help in crafting a new tale for Tony. Madlib and Ghost shine on "Block Rock," with Madlib'susual "shorter- than- three- minutes- faire", but it steams alongnonetheless. Again, on "Alex(Stolen Script)," the old- timey DOOM beat captures the true nature of Ghostface; his deft wordplay andclever, vivid storytelling make his material the standard for comparison whenit comes to New York emcees. Kanyeand Ne- Yo are featured on theunnecessary "Back Like That (Remix)." It when he teams with Amy Winehouse for the albums gem "You. Know I'm No Good," that Ironman proveshis metal in the R& B arena. There are a few weak tracks ("Gotta Hold On," "Good"), but thedope easily makes up for it ("Grew Up Hard," "Blue Armor," "Ghost is Back".. Rakim). It's impossible to complain about too much Ghostface; an oft- heard complaint here will more likely be thereisn't enough Pretty Tone with theheavy second billing of his crew. Needless to say, Ghost has nearly mastered his craft while his young crew is tryingeverything to see what sticks. Some tricks work, some don't, but Ghost is the only obvious constant onthe album. Few artists can boast having two albums released in the samecalendar year, no less on a crowded major label. It's a testament to just howgood Ghost is.
With the fury andrelative ease that Ghostface isworking at now, we're liable to see three albums next. We can always hopefor less of the Unit and more of Ghost though. The album may not beas "pure" as Fishscale, but More Fish certainly hold its weight.