Albums Revisited: CunninLynguists - A Piece of Strange

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The CunninLynguists, comprised of Deacon The Villain and producer extraordinaire Kno, have spent the last few years gliding under the radar in relative anonymity despite impressive work. 2001's "Will Rap For Food" and 2003's "Southernunderground" were wildly applauded by those in the "know" (pun intended). With rich lyrics and stunning beats, the fellas proved that Outkast and Goodie Mob weren't the only southern boys who could deliver funk with a conscious. But the obvious difference between the Dungeon Family's most distinguished and the 'Lynguists is sales. Why is this? Well, here's my theory…

Let's be honest: the underground hip-hop scene has gotten embarrassingly diluted in the past few years. Like any successful enterprise, when one product catches fire, the next thing you know there thousands of Tickle-Me-Elmo copycats everywhere (damn that was annoying). That's what's happening in hip-hop now. Everyone and his brother, backpack or street, wants to drop an album. I've even read a magazine interview where a well-known underground artist admits to releasing as many albums as possible (a few albums per year) at the expense of quality to combat bootlegging. As a result, with so many albums dropping every Tuesday, legitimately great artists like the CunninLynguists are lost in the sea of mediocrity. That's why sites like RapReviews.com are consistently getting more traffic. People have no idea which of the twenty albums to buy on any given week.

Well if it's any consolation, your boy One Line is letting it be known: COP THIS ALBUM. "A Piece of Strange," the 'Lynguist's third effort, is incredible. Kno has quickly become one of my favorite beatmakers. "The White Albulum," his take on Jay-Z's "last" album, was considered one of the best "The Black Album" remixes created. The momentum continues on this album. From laid-back to funky trunk, Kno conquers all musical styles. Not to be forgotten is Deacon's lyrical prowess. While I have to acknowledge that he's frequently overshadowed by Kno's amazing backdrops, that doesn't mean that he doesn't hold his own. That's like saying Scottie Pippen sucked because MJ always out-shined him. Scottie was great in his own right and so is Deacon. And yes, Kno is THAT good.

No song demonstrates the strength of the yin and yang better than "Beautiful Girl." Kno brilliantly employs a sped-up sample here (he does this throughout the album) alongside subtle drums and peppy horns to create the perfect "Sunday afternoon in July" vibe. Deacon comes through with the wordplay, verbalizing a clever love song to "Mary Jane." Needless to say, it's a concept track:

"Love so strong it can't be wrong for her to share with another
'Long as she touch my lips and fingers, fukk it, we're swingers
'Cause it's Jane that keeps me sane from what the world gon' bring us"

"Nothing to Give" is another standout track. Kno contributes dramatic piano keystrokes and a clapping drum as the emcee delivers ferocious lyrics about the real evil that goes bump in the night:

"We no longer seek light to give us power
That voice gets hushed by the rush of the witching hour
The touch of the wicked cowards that lurk in the dusk
And even tired heathens ride, searching for bucks
Anonymous and corrupt, assures obscurity
And a spell under its veil in impure security
We love it in our spirits 'cause we suckas for lust
Most even fukk in it, we too ashamed to be just"

"A Piece of Strange" is solid front-to-back. You'd be hard-pressed to find a better album than this one. Three superb albums deep, it's about time the Cunninlynguists blew up. Blame the rap game. It shouldn't have taken this long.

Music Vibes: 9 of 10 Lyric Vibes: 8 of 10 TOTAL Vibes: 8.5 of 10


personal classic and i'd argue could be a southern classic if more people heard it. the production is pretty incredible
 

Mindfield333

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My favorite is the album that comes after this one, Dirty Acres...

It even has Big Rube on the intro :wow:
 

FRIED MASON

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My favorite is the album that comes after this one, Dirty Acres...

It even has Big Rube on the intro :wow:

The remix of Georgia :whew:

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RRvUG9efGNw]Cunninlynguist - Georgia [Remix] f. Killer Mike & Khujo Goodie **NEW** - YouTube[/ame]
 
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dirty acres, while VERY good , isn't as cohesive with a running theme like APOS imo. then again i feel like the peaks of dirty acres might be higher.

that song "the park" i play anytime i wanna feel like it's summer time.




^ i posted the remix though cuz that beat is amazing
 
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i mostly made this thread to see if anyone really realized the theme the first time around


Biblical References:
The 16 songs contain loose connections with certain defined Biblical numerics and their interpretations.

1 Unity; New beginnings
2 Union; Division; Wittnessing
3 Divine completeness and perfection
4 Creation; The world; Creative works
5 Grace; God’s goodness; Pentatuech (first five books)
6 Weakness of man; Manifestation of sin ; Evils of Satan
7 Resurrection; Spiritual completeness; Fathers perfection
8 New birth; New beginnings
9 Fruit of the spirit; Divine completeness from the Father
10 Testimony; Law and responsiblity
11 Disorder and judgement
12 Governmental perfection
13 Apostacy; depravity and rebellion
14 Deliverance; Salvation
15 Rest
16 Love

“This album is not meant to be overtly Christian in theme or presentation, but moreso delivering an amoral slant to a storyline communicated through hip-hop. Deacon’s life growing up as the son of a preacher definitely led us to some of the insights and story molding that went on when we were making and recording the album, but as most moderate Christians will tell you…you have to relate the material as generally as possible without preaching and talking down to people. APOS wasn’t meant to teach faith-infused lessons neccesarily, but simply to deliver a story.” – Kno
 

Mindfield333

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i mostly made this thread to see if anyone really realized the theme the first time around


Biblical References:
The 16 songs contain loose connections with certain defined Biblical numerics and their interpretations.

1 Unity; New beginnings
2 Union; Division; Wittnessing
3 Divine completeness and perfection
4 Creation; The world; Creative works
5 Grace; God’s goodness; Pentatuech (first five books)
6 Weakness of man; Manifestation of sin ; Evils of Satan
7 Resurrection; Spiritual completeness; Fathers perfection
8 New birth; New beginnings
9 Fruit of the spirit; Divine completeness from the Father
10 Testimony; Law and responsiblity
11 Disorder and judgement
12 Governmental perfection
13 Apostacy; depravity and rebellion
14 Deliverance; Salvation
15 Rest
16 Love

“This album is not meant to be overtly Christian in theme or presentation, but moreso delivering an amoral slant to a storyline communicated through hip-hop. Deacon’s life growing up as the son of a preacher definitely led us to some of the insights and story molding that went on when we were making and recording the album, but as most moderate Christians will tell you…you have to relate the material as generally as possible without preaching and talking down to people. APOS wasn’t meant to teach faith-infused lessons neccesarily, but simply to deliver a story.” – Kno

I honestly just glossed over this album. im really gonna listed to it now
 
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I honestly just glossed over this album. im really gonna listed to it now

i promise this album will take the next level once you listen with that in mind. i know it did to me. excellently executed.



and lines like this (as explained by the rapper) :



“Keep the wind to your right or hit the pen flying kites.”

In literal form, keep the wind on one side of you (as a child) or you’ll hit the pen (pigpen, shed, whatever) with your kite.

or

Keep the wind to your “right” (what do you choose in right vs. wrong) or hit the pen (either jail or an actual ink pen) flying kites (prison slang for letters to and from jail). Do wrong and end up sending letters from jail.



:whew:
 
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This album is in my top 3 of the decade. So amazing. The Gates had me shook the first time I heard it.

what do you think of the biblical references? do you think it puts it over the top because it's hard to make an album like that, or do u think it's pretentious? obviously i lean towards the latter, even though i'm an atheist, but just wonderin
 

iNad925

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Absolutely fukking love this song from A Piece of Strange




BUT, my favorite CunninLynguists track, without a doubt, is

 
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Thatrogueassdiaz

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i promise this album will take the next level once you listen with that in mind. i know it did to me. excellently executed.



and lines like this (as explained by the rapper) :



“Keep the wind to your right or hit the pen flying kites.”

In literal form, keep the wind on one side of you (as a child) or you’ll hit the pen (pigpen, shed, whatever) with your kite.

or

Keep the wind to your “right” (what do you choose in right vs. wrong) or hit the pen (either jail or an actual ink pen) flying kites (prison slang for letters to and from jail). Do wrong and end up sending letters from jail.



:whew:

I've never listened to A Piece Of Strange but going from your interpretation The wind would actually be God himself, as God, spirit and wind have the same Hebrew word and have interchangeable meanings in the bible

Sent from my SCH-I535 using Tapatalk 2
 
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