
Whitey Ford Sings the Blues
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
Brani 1.The white boy is back 2. (Dollar bill) 3.Ends 4.What it's like 5.Get down 6.Sen dog 7.Tired 8.Hot to death 9.Painkillers 10.Prince Paul 11.Praise the lord 12.Today (Watch me shine) 13.Guru 14.Death comes callin` 15.Funky beat 16.The letter 17.Years 18.Next man
AMAZON
A stint with boisterous Irish-American posse House Of Pain (whose one lowbrow but infectious hit, "Jump Around", has since become a staple of every malt liquor ad in the US) led to endless touring, brief forays into substance abuse and, ultimately, a near-fatal heart attack. Whereupon rapper Everlast took stock of his life, and found it wanting. He slowly gathered his strength, wrote some songs, and returned with a far more sober and thoughtful album than many--familiar only with his thuggish B-boy incarnation--would have believed him capable of. As the title suggests, it's essentially a blues record, driven for the most part by his own acoustic guitar, and while he's unlikely to pose a threat to the Howling Wolfs of the world, there's an acuity to his tales of urban unemployment, single parenthood and low-income housing, that synchs perfectly with the genre. A fascinating and mostly successful attempt at re-invention. --Andrew McGuire
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
Brani 1.The white boy is back 2. (Dollar bill) 3.Ends 4.What it's like 5.Get down 6.Sen dog 7.Tired 8.Hot to death 9.Painkillers 10.Prince Paul 11.Praise the lord 12.Today (Watch me shine) 13.Guru 14.Death comes callin` 15.Funky beat 16.The letter 17.Years 18.Next man
AMAZON
A stint with boisterous Irish-American posse House Of Pain (whose one lowbrow but infectious hit, "Jump Around", has since become a staple of every malt liquor ad in the US) led to endless touring, brief forays into substance abuse and, ultimately, a near-fatal heart attack. Whereupon rapper Everlast took stock of his life, and found it wanting. He slowly gathered his strength, wrote some songs, and returned with a far more sober and thoughtful album than many--familiar only with his thuggish B-boy incarnation--would have believed him capable of. As the title suggests, it's essentially a blues record, driven for the most part by his own acoustic guitar, and while he's unlikely to pose a threat to the Howling Wolfs of the world, there's an acuity to his tales of urban unemployment, single parenthood and low-income housing, that synchs perfectly with the genre. A fascinating and mostly successful attempt at re-invention. --Andrew McGuire
Original: $16.10
-65%$16.10
$5.63Description
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
Brani 1.The white boy is back 2. (Dollar bill) 3.Ends 4.What it's like 5.Get down 6.Sen dog 7.Tired 8.Hot to death 9.Painkillers 10.Prince Paul 11.Praise the lord 12.Today (Watch me shine) 13.Guru 14.Death comes callin` 15.Funky beat 16.The letter 17.Years 18.Next man
AMAZON
A stint with boisterous Irish-American posse House Of Pain (whose one lowbrow but infectious hit, "Jump Around", has since become a staple of every malt liquor ad in the US) led to endless touring, brief forays into substance abuse and, ultimately, a near-fatal heart attack. Whereupon rapper Everlast took stock of his life, and found it wanting. He slowly gathered his strength, wrote some songs, and returned with a far more sober and thoughtful album than many--familiar only with his thuggish B-boy incarnation--would have believed him capable of. As the title suggests, it's essentially a blues record, driven for the most part by his own acoustic guitar, and while he's unlikely to pose a threat to the Howling Wolfs of the world, there's an acuity to his tales of urban unemployment, single parenthood and low-income housing, that synchs perfectly with the genre. A fascinating and mostly successful attempt at re-invention. --Andrew McGuire