From Connecticut Underground MC/Producer Indifference Studio 10 LP in front of us. Appearing on Demigodz and members of the pharaoh team founded by Open Mic & Vinnie Paz, he was also signed to Atlantic Records at one time, although he eventually left because of creative differences. Since then, the alien tongue has built solo records alone, and my favorite is the piano of honor! and where the son of the widow or the nearest river meets the king of the gods. No second is fully produced by Stu Bangas. Mainly produced by Playa Haze, Connecticut Leisure 2 is a very valuable successor to Connecticut Leisure last spring, preparing for the summer by remembering his mom and dad.
Little Vic & Suave-Ski’s “Great Flood” is reminiscent of a series of severe floods that affected various parts of the United States about 4 years ago, and “Shore Life” puts the three together to bring the self-made boom BAP joints back to their feeling of growing up on the East Coast. “Put Money in a Bag” by Playa Haze found the couple stuck together so they could talk about being busy until “all good” is affectionately suggesting you that if you need anything, you’ll holla on him.
La Coka Nostra’s Slaine appeared on “Blue Collar Scholar” and talked about their art they created in a lie of a sample-driven boom, while the title track was unheard of, referring to the 1980s, when he was referring to the President and First Lady of the United States for most of his parents. “Vintage Canvas” cleverly cracks the code without going into practice mode, but then Ryu’s “Old Lyme-like” exudes a way to lay off staff to make the beat talk about making the champagne explode.
“Summer on the shore” took a soul sample so that he could admit that he was tired of counting money and sleeping with his wife and wife, proclaiming himself a slave to consumerism, and “1 Crown” returned to the boom, wondering the possibilities of those who never really mattered as much as he said. “Lee Harv” features Little Vic’s poems and works, and sees 2 warnings you’ll be shot in front of the world, as if Kennedy’s assassination and “Whalers” wrap it all up with some woodwind instruments and weigh the whales on the same scale as they used.
Coalmine Records, working with Dirty version of the record, discovered the greatest memory of AP’s growth in the 1980s, during Ronald Reagan’s presidency because he felt like he was a politician and his legacy raised by an actor, even if neither of them had anything to do with him. Underground veterans have masked a decade of nostalgia for raising alien and sociopolitical commentary, an archive, an individual theme that expanded from the country last spring to the impact on the Reagan administration on his life to what it is today.
Score: 8/10