DMX – The Great Depression

    It’s been three years since the loner from Yonkers brought
    hip-hop to a standstill and introduced his grimy, eerie flow and street lyrical
    content. Ruff Ryders‘ first
    introduction to the game, DMX, has
    hit the hip-hop world with his fourth album, The
    Great Depression
    . With 17 tracks, and production by DMX himself, Dame Grease, Swizz and
    other Bloodline producers, this
    album doesn’t seem to hit the same cord that his previous albums did.

    Over the summer, the Dark Man has
    been in a label ‘battle’ with Ruff
    Ryders
    , set up his own label, Bloodline
    records, as well as a few spells in jail, and it seems his album has suffered
    as a result.

    The first track, Sometimes, is X talking, in his classic gruff voice,
    and that leads into School street, which
    comes as a surprise as it bangs into the senses. Other standout tracks include Who We Be, which will have you
    banging your head with the beat and X‘s
    flow. Trina Moe, sounds like classic DMX, We Right Here and
    Number II will be definite club bangers.
    Also You Could Be Blind featuring Mashonda, is a nice track with the
    female singer making her presence known.

    The next instalment in the Damien series, Damien III has a
    nice piano loop but fails to clutch the attention of listeners as well as the
    previous versions did. Shorty Was The Bomb
    sounds like another ‘getting p*ssy, then gone’ type of song which made me fast
    forward. And a borrowed sample from Stephanie
    Mills
    song Watcha Gonna Do (With My Lovin’)
    plays the main point in the track When I’m Nothing
    but it doesn’t play well with the mentals.

    The anticipated Bloodline Anthem was expected to do
    what Ruff Ryders Anthem did but is
    filled with a rock guitar and a hook, which screams ‘it’s our time to let them
    know’. But the saving grace of this track is X‘s shot at fellow Def Jammer, Ja
    Rule
    , Told Niggas to ‘do yo’ courtesy of Flex/
    Put out…Then There Was X, then there was X again/ Ain’t my next of kin, just
    some hard-headed, dick-riding, grown-ass man
    .

    DMX worked hard to get where he is
    but it sounds as if he is now put his attention onto other things, and his
    album suffers as a result. The album is more ‘fast-forward’ than ‘rewind’ but
    die-hard DMX fans will push it to
    the platinum status that he always receives.

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