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The sun rises in the east / Jeru the Damaja.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: MusicMusicPublisher number: 697 124 011-2 | PayDay/FFRRPublication details: New York, NY : PayDay/FFRR, ℗1994.Description: 1 audio disc (40 min.) : digital ; 4 3/4 inContent type:
  • performed music
Media type:
  • audio
Carrier type:
  • audio disc
Subject(s): Genre/Form:
Contents:
Intro (Life) (0:50) -- D. original (3:35) -- Brooklyn took it (3:22) -- Perverted monks in tha house (skit) (1:13) -- Mental stamina (2:21) -- Da bichez (3:51) -- You can't stop the prophet (3:54) -- Perverted monks in tha house (theme) (1:02) -- Ain't the devil happy (1:02) -- My mind spray (3:44) -- Come clean (4:57) -- Jungle music (3:50) -- Statik (3:07).
With various performers.
Audiovisual profile: Click to open in new window
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult CD Adult CD Northport Library CD HIP-HOP Jeru the Damaja Available 33111009915709
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

DJ Premier's first album-length production outside of Gang Starr was his best by far. Where Premier's productions hadn't shone underneath the cracking, over-earnest vocals of Guru, with a superior stylist like Jeru these tracks became brilliant musical investigations with odd hooks (often detuned bells, keys, or vibes), perfectly scratched upchoruses, and the grittiest, funkiest Brooklynese beats pounding away in the background. Of course, the star of the show was Jeru, a cocksure young rapper who brought the dozens from the streets to a metaphysical battleground where he did battle with all manner of foe -- the guy around the corner on "D. Original" or an allegorical parade of hip-hop evils on "You Can't Stop the Prophet." The commentary about inner-city plagues arising from spiritual ignorance only continued on "Ain't the Devil Happy," with Jeru preaching knowledge of self as the only rescue from greed and violence. Jeru also courted some controversy with "Da Bichez," at first explaining, "I'm not talkin' 'bout the queens...not the sisters...not the young ladies," but later admitting his thoughts ("most chicks want minks, diamonds, or Benz"). His flow and delivery were natural, his themes were impressive, and he was able to make funky rhymes out of intellectual hyperbole like: "Written on these pages is the ageless, wisdom of the sages/Ignorance is contagious." It lacks a landmark track, but The Sun Rises in the East stands alongside Nas' Illmatic (released the same year, and also boasting the work of Premier) as one of the quintessential East Coast records. ~ John Bush

With various performers.

Recorded at D & D Recording Studio, New York, N.Y.

Compact disc.

Parental advisory: explicit lyrics.

Intro (Life) (0:50) -- D. original (3:35) -- Brooklyn took it (3:22) -- Perverted monks in tha house (skit) (1:13) -- Mental stamina (2:21) -- Da bichez (3:51) -- You can't stop the prophet (3:54) -- Perverted monks in tha house (theme) (1:02) -- Ain't the devil happy (1:02) -- My mind spray (3:44) -- Come clean (4:57) -- Jungle music (3:50) -- Statik (3:07).

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