That commentI made earlier about hearing 2Pac’s voice on a Prodigy album can also beapplied here if you swap his name out for Jay-Z’s.
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I’m here forhis reference to The Truman Show, however.
![prodigy hnic album download zip prodigy hnic album download zip](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/3b/cc/7d/3bcc7df9f2c9182272266b146681ad8f.jpg)
Also, this is the second track in a row where our hostexpresses concern about the chemicals present in the foods we eat. Consideringhis messages on “Tyranny”, I can only believe that our host was deliberatelyfucking with us in an effort to prove that you should do your own research andnot just blindly believe anybody, not even your heroes, but I feel like that’sgiving Hegelian Dialectic (The Book of Revelation) a bit too much credit.“Mafuckin U$A” is a pretty bad song, though, due to its bland Budgie Beatsinstrumental and lazy Prodigy bars, as positive messages don’t automaticallywin you points here.
![prodigy hnic album download zip prodigy hnic album download zip](http://marcoappe.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/fotomix.jpg)
Prodigyisn’t really known for his sense of humor (although sarcasm runs rampantthroughout his catalog, and there are quite a few laugh-out-loud moments in hisautobiography), but placing “Mafuckin U$A” (the second single̶man,Cellblock P really didn’t give a shit about marketing this project, huh?)immediately after “Tyranny” is fucking hysterical, since he spends the first ofhis two verses telling the listener not to believe every conspiracy theory theyhear, because sometime shit just happens with no rhyme or reason. I mean, if the government is the real enemyof the people, couldn’t they just devalue your hard-earned money, rendering itworthless? I’d like to believe that this song was simply Cellblock P’s reactionto the Trump administration, having somehow seen just how bad things were goingto get in the United States, but even I realize that’s a reach. Ican‘t imagine that Prodigy was ever successful at selling this propaganda tohis audience, especially when he makes it a point to add some bars about how he“create money” so that his great-grandchildren can benefit, lines that makeno fucking sense given the context. His conspiracy theories also fail to gain any traction, since tryingto scare off the listener with lines such as, “the enemy is government tyranny”without providing anything resembling a solution is irresponsible at best. El RTNC’s instrumental runs at a slower speedthan our hoist usually operates in, so he’s forced to awkwardly speed up hisflow, which makes him sound like a fucking fraud, like the rap game BenShapiro. Alas, “Tyranny” sucks,both as a song and as a message. Prodigy as a hip hop Joe Rogan could have been aninteresting direction for his career to have traveled. Wikipediainforms me that “Tyranny” was the first single released from Hegelian Dialectic (The Book of Revelation), and I have to say, wow: Cellblock P dropped ananti-government screed that also claims that the 9/11 terrorist attacks were aninside job as his first single? No wonder the line “jet fuel doesn’t melt steelbeams” appears during the chorus. This isn’t the worst song I’ve ever heardfrom the guy, even if our host’s examples of definitely real human beings thatabsolutely exist commenting on our chosen genre steers closer to those of apolitician sincerely looking for your vote, but it still wasn’t very fun tolisten to. He’s too calm,really: this kind of argument truly deserves the passion Prodigy has freelyprovided for other subject matter.
![prodigy hnic album download zip prodigy hnic album download zip](https://imgstatic.soldoutservice.com/0kluoVFN/1096a074b53/s2000/Supreme-spring-summer-2021.jpg)
“Broken Rappers” finds Cellblock P ruminating over thestate of our chosen genre (or at least what passed for it back in 2017),finding that “ ain’t the same,” mostly because “rappers better whenthey broke / ‘cause when they get that money, they lose touch with the folks.”Prodigy isn’t exactly wrong here, but are we supposed to pretend that hehimself hasn’t sold a bunch of albums and is, by most measures, a dude withquite a bit of money? Also, why is this called “Broken Rappers” and not “BrokeRappers”? The Beat Butcha instrumental is far too subdued for an aggressiveattack on the state of hip hop, but to his credit, our host realizes this,delivering his observations in a calm, matter-of-fact manner.