The Stimulus Package (Deluxe Edition)
Download links and information about The Stimulus Package (Deluxe Edition) by Jake One, The Freeway. This album was released in 2010 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap genres. It contains 17 tracks with total duration of 01:00:54 minutes.
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Artist: | Jake One, The Freeway |
Release date: | 2010 |
Genre: | Hip Hop/R&B, Rap |
Tracks: | 17 |
Duration: | 01:00:54 |
Buy it NOW at: | |
Buy on iTunes $11.99 |
Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Stimulus Intro (feat. Beanie Sigel) | 1:54 |
2. | Throw Your Hands Up | 3:45 |
3. | One Foot In | 3:30 |
4. | She Makes Me Feel Alright | 3:37 |
5. | Never Gonna Change | 3:46 |
6. | One Thing (feat. Raekwon) | 3:48 |
7. | Know What I Mean | 2:17 |
8. | The Product | 3:39 |
9. | Microphone Killa (feat. Young Chris) | 3:30 |
10. | Follow My Moves (feat. Birdman) | 4:07 |
11. | Sho' Nuff (feat. Bun B) | 4:15 |
12. | Freekin' the Beat (feat. Latoiya Williams) | 4:24 |
13. | Money (feat. Omillio Sparks & Mr. Porter) | 3:56 |
14. | Free People | 3:01 |
15. | Stimulus Outro | 5:34 |
16. | African Drums | 3:07 |
17. | Always-N-Forever | 2:44 |
Details
[Edit]The collaboration between Seattle beat maker Jake One and Philly rapper Freeway is definitive of a new creative model for rap music: one producer from one part of the country links with a rapper from another part of the country in the service of a lean, focused album with a minimum of guests and gimmicks. The Stimulus Package is clearly meant to echo the fundamentalist values of old-school hip-hop culture without resorting to nostalgia or imitation. The songs are well crafted and straightforward, laced with vintage soul samples that don’t mimic the 2001-era old-style of Kanye West, but rather seem to conjure the voices from an earlier generation of hardworking black voices. This effect is best experienced on “Money,” in which Freeway recounts a lifetime of hustles — from sweeping hair in the barbershop to “sellin’ incense and oils to all the people there”— over a mournful sample from 24 Carat Black’s 1973 song “Poverty’s Paradise.” Freeway’s final verse from the same song epitomizes the album’s ethos.