Bestsellers > Music > Rap Rock
|
|
Buy Now |
Mental Floss for the Globe(more) »rank: 87226by: Urban Dance Squad
|
Buy Now |
Let 'Em Bleed the Mixxtape(more) »rank: 55813by: DJ Clay
|
Buy Now |
Transistor(more) »rank: 56672by: 311
: :With Sublime and Sugar Ray having made whitewashed reggae a hot commodity on the pop charts, it makes sense that the prime movers of the genre are making a headlong comeback into the fray. With Transistor, 311 goes for the jugular, cramming the disc with over 20 songs, and just as many angles on its melange of rock, hip-hop and Caribbean musical styles. There are hyper rap-metal rehashes of the hit 'Down' ('Tune In,' 'Starshines,' and 'Borders'), chunky guitar tracks ('Beautiful Disaster'), and lots of frivolous reggae-lite songs ('Light Years,' 'Stealing Happy Hours'). --Aidin Vaziri |
Buy Now |
Hidden Stash II: The Kream of the Krop(more) »rank: 22202by: Kottonmouth Kings
: :The Kottonmouth Kings' output--five albums in five years--is enough to make you question their status as ganja-happy slackers. Where 2000's High Society covered their love for the weed from every angle, Hidden Stash, Vol. 2 gives us a Kings eager to self-mythologize their staying power and roots ('Welcome to the Suburbs' attempts a 'Straight Outta Compton' for Orange County) while acknowledging a lack of new things to say about pot. To be sure, this is still the same hip-hop-hardcore-reggae outfit that once snagged High Times' Band of the Year award. But on Hidden Stash, Vol. 2, the Kings seem more committed to their ... |
Buy Now |
Little Nicky (2000 Film)(more) »rank: 63722from: Maverick
: :An Adam Sandler movie that stars Ozzy Osbourne as himself, Rodney Dangerfield as Satan's dad, and Harvey Keitel as Satan is bound to enlist a similarly high-profile collection of music acts to underscore things. Sure enough, a quick scan of the bands signed on reveals a pretty solid 'Who's Who' of late-'90s hard rock. In this context, Cypress Hill are positively old-school. However, their track, 'Rock Superstar,' sounds perfectly slotted next to the molten screed of P.O.D., the moody murk of Incubus, and the machine head cutting edge of the Deftones (represented twice here, especially revealing in the final acoustic track). Insolence prove ... |
Buy Now |
Take a Bite Outta Rhyme: A Rock Tribute to Rap(more) »rank: 130414by: Sevendust, Bloodhound Gang, Dope, Insane Clown Posse, Kottonmouth Kings, Staind, Mindless Self Indulgence
: :Since many Limp Bizkit, Eminem, and Korn fans aren't hip to the original rap influences that informed the late-1990s rap-metal explosion, Take a Bite Outta Rhyme's intentions are honorable--have rock bands cover tunes by rap luminaries such as Public Enemy, LL Cool J, and Ice-T. But things go astray with Dynamite Hack's intentionally sappy reworking of Eazy-E's 'Boys-n-the Hood,' followed by weak efforts from the overhyped Insane Clown Posse, Bloodhound Gang, and Dope. Then there are unimpressive entries from Driver, Factory 81, and Mindless Self Indulgence. The best renditions are heavy ones: Staind's 'Bring the Noise,' Sevendust's 'Going Back to Cali,' and Nonpoint's ... |
Buy Now |
Sarsippius' Ark(more) »rank: 125531by: Infectious Grooves
: :Since many Limp Bizkit, Eminem, and Korn fans aren't hip to the original rap influences that informed the late-1990s rap-metal explosion, Take a Bite Outta Rhyme's intentions are honorable--have rock bands cover tunes by rap luminaries such as Public Enemy, LL Cool J, and Ice-T. But things go astray with Dynamite Hack's intentionally sappy reworking of Eazy-E's 'Boys-n-the Hood,' followed by weak efforts from the overhyped Insane Clown Posse, Bloodhound Gang, and Dope. Then there are unimpressive entries from Driver, Factory 81, and Mindless Self Indulgence. The best renditions are heavy ones: Staind's 'Bring the Noise,' Sevendust's 'Going Back to Cali,' and Nonpoint's ... |
Buy Now |
Double Wide(more) »rank: 139138by: Uncle Kracker
: :Since many Limp Bizkit, Eminem, and Korn fans aren't hip to the original rap influences that informed the late-1990s rap-metal explosion, Take a Bite Outta Rhyme's intentions are honorable--have rock bands cover tunes by rap luminaries such as Public Enemy, LL Cool J, and Ice-T. But things go astray with Dynamite Hack's intentionally sappy reworking of Eazy-E's 'Boys-n-the Hood,' followed by weak efforts from the overhyped Insane Clown Posse, Bloodhound Gang, and Dope. Then there are unimpressive entries from Driver, Factory 81, and Mindless Self Indulgence. The best renditions are heavy ones: Staind's 'Bring the Noise,' Sevendust's 'Going Back to Cali,' and Nonpoint's ... |
Buy Now |
Menace to Sobriety(more) »rank: 49894by: OPM
: :The astonishingly and presumably deliberately inept artwork of this debut from Californian skate punks OPM helps create a carefully contrived image of a bunch of lads intent on loafing about, doing as little as possible. The threesome's modus operandi--which involves sun, sex, tattoos, getting stoned, and traveling the streets on four small wheels--is cemented by the opening tracks 'Stash Up' (a paean to smoking grass and not giving a flying one for anything) and 'Heaven Is a Halfpipe' (a surprisingly catchy sing-along about the joys of skateboarding). Menace to Sobriety's boisterous, good-time feel sprawls across its 15 tracks like a teenager on a ... |
Buy Now |
Straight Outta Humboldt(more) »rank: 47571by: Potluck
: :The astonishingly and presumably deliberately inept artwork of this debut from Californian skate punks OPM helps create a carefully contrived image of a bunch of lads intent on loafing about, doing as little as possible. The threesome's modus operandi--which involves sun, sex, tattoos, getting stoned, and traveling the streets on four small wheels--is cemented by the opening tracks 'Stash Up' (a paean to smoking grass and not giving a flying one for anything) and 'Heaven Is a Halfpipe' (a surprisingly catchy sing-along about the joys of skateboarding). Menace to Sobriety's boisterous, good-time feel sprawls across its 15 tracks like a teenager on a ... |




