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MONEY BOSS PLAYERS Ghetto Chronicle Daily SECTION 8
Sought after indy rap classic -INCREDIBLY STILL SEALED!
| Start Price |
USD 499.00 |
| Current Price |
USD 499.00 |
| Time Left |
- |
| Bid Count |
0 |
| Buy It Now Price |
- |
| Reserve Price |
- |
| Start Time |
Tuesday, August 26, 2008 |
| End Time |
Tuesday, September 02, 2008 |
| Location |
Copenhagen |
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See more about 'MONEY BOSS PLAYERS Ghetto Chronicle Daily SECTION 8'
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Description
MONEY BOSS PLAYERS - Ghetto Chronicle Daily - LP Album - STILL SEALED! Technical data: Label: Section 8 Records (1994) Cat. no.: S8-001 Description: This is NOT a bootleg or some fake re-issue - It's the real deal. The record was bought back in 1994 when I was in New York and was lucky enough to buy 2 copies the week it came out as far as I remember - this is my sealed copy I'm selling now. Have faith - check my feedback. Payment and shipping: I only accept Paypal - shipping for this item is 35 USD (registered service only as we don't want this to get lost in transit - better safe than sorry!) Here is the chance to win a true indy rap gem Below you find what others have written about the crew and this insanely rare album: Like most of their music, Ghetto Chronicle Daily was pressed exclusively on vinyl in paltry quantities. In the middle to late ‘90s, the grittiest mixtapes transported the MBP’s fantastically violent, hyper-stylistic, and likeably arrogant brand of hip hop to the very streets that they render in striking detail. The raw, uncompromising tracks command respect for the crew’s skill and sincerity before you absorb a single rhyme. Over the hardest of drum sounds, the MBP’s blend stoic reportage with cocky criminal boasting and earn the right to title their EP like a local newspaper. One cannot help but notice their exacting attention to the lingo, behavior, and fashion of their beloved streets. These stories are made more lifelike and compelling as a result of such perspicacious detail; adherence to a plotline and character development is rare. Songs like the fast-paced, cinematic “Saturday Night, Sunday Morning” and the swingy “What You Saying” are inviting and mirthful but also caustically threatening: the rhymes rarely promote endeavors more ambitious than spending dirty money on wanton nightlife debauchery. The MBP’s paint a portrait of Bronx life that is conceived, created, distributed, and received through the fictive, convoluting lens of the most famous art form ever birthed in that borough. Thus Ghetto Chronicle Daily delivers on the promise of its title: it is an objective depiction of inner-city existence that purports to unfold in real time even as it is clearly manipulated at every turn by its creators. The record is no less worthwhile for its poetic deception: the emcees adapt ably to Minnesota’s broad range of sounds, sounding convincingly sadistic (“Nighty-Night”) or gleefully invincible (“Used To Fear Death) depending on the track. Haters foolish enough to dismiss the Players as a famous-for-not-being-famous “random rap” crew rank foremost among people who need to check Ghetto Chronicle Daily (aging b-boys and connoisseurs of the ‘90s East Coast DIY aesthetic got next). The EP’s rarity is virtually irrelevant to a discussion about its quality. The material itself is so dope, so mature, so rich, and so fully realized that the inevitable comparisons to early Kool G. Rap will not seem far-fetched in years to come. Ghetto Chronicle Daily is the truth, point-blank. Thanks for watching and please email me for further questions
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