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Ten
Clouddead
Ten
Genres: Pop, Rap & Hip-Hop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (10) - Disc #1

2004 album from the experimental/ambient hip-hop outfit fronted by Doseone & why?. 'Ten' finds cLOUDDEAD building on all the elements that defined their razor sharp vocal interplay, quirky found sound samples, ambient...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Clouddead
Title: Ten
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Mush
Release Date: 3/16/2004
Genres: Pop, Rap & Hip-Hop, Rock
Style: Pop Rap
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 663405123028

Synopsis

Album Description
2004 album from the experimental/ambient hip-hop outfit fronted by Doseone & why?. 'Ten' finds cLOUDDEAD building on all the elements that defined their razor sharp vocal interplay, quirky found sound samples, ambient drone, & more. Big Dada.

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CD Reviews

I love this album, and I'm not sure why....
btnh1999 | 05/11/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This isn't a "must-own for any hip-hop fan." This isn't a "chart-topping hit." I'm not even sure I would label it as hip-hop, it's got a cool folk feel on a couple songs. I picked this album up on a hunch at a library, thinking I recognized the name "cLOUDDEAD" from somewhere. I didn't, although I had heard Dose One before on the Aesop Rock track "Odessa." This was nothing like Dose on that song, but I liked this album anyway. Maybe you will too."
What is Hip-Hop?
J. Shepherd | Chicago, Il | 04/29/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"The genre as a whole has grown stale, the same recycled beats and ideas for the last twenty-something years. Hard gangster or lofty-intellectual are irrelevant, the production is much the same. So many are anxious and ready to criticize this album for breaking the conventional boundries of hip-hop, as it does just that. "Ten" represents the linear progression that is necessary in order for hip-hop culture to survive. The album plays on boundries of genre, an amalgamation of influences so vast an untraditional that on the first few listens it becomes abrassive to an average listener. However, consider yourself encouraged to dig deep into this album and keep listneing, eventually you will understand. After all, is that not the music that has lasted the longest? The old set of albums you listen to still, from years past that took time to comprehend, albums you've had to invest a part of yourself in. "Ten" is the oyster with the pearl that you keep, not the one you swallow whole and throw away.



"And then we said f- in our pop song.""