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To The East Blackwards
To The East Blackwards

To The East Blackwards

Product ID : 18893175
4.7 out of 5 stars


Galleon Product ID 18893175
UPC / ISBN 016244401923
Shipping Weight 0.19 lbs
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Model 1979206
Manufacturer X-CLAN
Shipping Dimension 5.59 x 4.8 x 0.28 inches
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1,283

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To The East Blackwards Features

  • Shrink-wrapped


About To The East Blackwards

X-Clan: Professor X, The Rhythem Provider Sugar Shaft, Grand Architect Paradise, Brother J. Producers: Jason Hunter, Lumumba Carson, Claude "Paradise" Gray, Anthony Hardin. Recording information: I.N.S. Recording Studios. Photographer: George DuBose. The self-sufficient X Clan should've made a bigger splash with To the East, Blackwards, the group's debut album for 4th & Broadway. Name-dropping Nat Turner and Marcus Garvey and dressing in red, black, and green instead of black and silver didn't exactly lend itself to marketability in 1990, but there's no evidence to the contrary that this Afrocentric group released one of the best rap records that year -- which is saying a great deal. Yes, plenty of groups had already swiped liberally from Funkadelic, and true, "Grand Verbalizer"'s instrumental backdrop is nearly identical to "Microphone Fiend," but there's an infectious vigor with the way each track is fired off that makes those points moot. Brother J's bookish, caramel-smooth delivery is like no other, and Professor X's jolting appearances after nearly every verse ("This is protected by the red, the black, and the green -- with a key! Sissy!") add even more character to the album. X Clan relentlessly pushes its pro-black motives and beliefs, and though the points are vague at times, at no point does it ever grow tiring. This isn't just a testament to the skills of the MCs -- it also stands as a testament to the group members as producers. Like the best work of BDP and PE, a thorough listen to To the East, Blackwards is more likely to provoke deep thought than an entire chapter of the average American school's history book. And history books simply don't provide this kind of electric charge. ~ Andy Kellman