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The 3rd World | 
| Artist: Immortal Technique & Dj Green Lantern Label: Viper Category: Music
List Price: $15.98 Buy New: $12.99 You Save: $2.99 (19%)
Rating: 39 reviews Sales Rank: 1714
Format: Explicit Lyrics Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.4
MPN: 8 UPC: 764942156828 EAN: 0764942156828 ASIN: B00189MH9Y
Release Date: June 24, 2008 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Tracks:
| • | Death March (featuring Dj Green Lantern) | | • | That's What it Is | | • | Golpe De Estado (featuring Veneno & Temperamento) | | • | Harlem Renaissance | | • | Lick Shots (featuring Chino XL, Crooked I) | | • | Apocrypha - Interlude | | • | The 3rd World | | • | Hollywood Driveby (featuring Psycho Realm & Sick Symphonies) | | • | Reverse Pimpology (featuring Mojo) | | • | Open Your Eyes | | • | The Payback (featuring Diabolic & RasKass) | | • | Adios Uncle Tom - Skit | | • | Stronghold Grip (featuring Poison Pen & Swave Sevah) | | • | Mistakes | | • | Parole (Evil Genius Mix) | | • | Crimes of the Heart (featuring Maya Azucena)Bonus Cuts... In order of appearance.*Apocalypse Remix (featuring Akir & Pharoahe Monch)*Watchout Remix*Rebel Arms (featuring J.Arch & Da Circle) |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Album Description The concept behind the album coming is built around relating the streets here in the US to those around the world. To illustrate that no matter what we face here, our native post-colonial lands are suffering 1000 times worse. This project was made to create more dialogue and communication between this country and Latin America, Africa, Eastern Europe, The Middle East, and South East Asia, all those lands that were under European or American rule (less than 20 years ago in some places). For far too long we have been separated by petty rivalries and the unfathomably counterproductive superiority complexes that divide our people. No matter how difficult the conditions of our lives are in this nation they are still incomparable to the struggle of the people, (who we were once a part of) that are overseas or right across the border. Revolution is about a constant movement. So instead of retreating intellectually and physically, I choose to advance. I chose to build stronger alliances with my peoples overseas and here in this nation. This album/mixtape has something for everyone, not only in the style of music but in terms of it's mention of so many important topics that are sometimes swept under the rug by corporate media and culture that was bastardized by the oligarchy of the music industry. The title itself has a dual significance, the struggle of developing countries (who are usually almost always former slave states or vassal kingdoms) are mirrored within the Rap Industry. In the same way that First World Super Powers have traditionally and now continuously exploited the 3rd world for its natural resources, land, labor and industry the Major Label Super powers have done the same. Not only in the underground of Hip Hop but music in general, because the underground is the "The 3rd World." They have taken the industry, the labor and the intellectual property of our culture and claimed ownership as they once did by landing on foreign soil that didn't belong to them in the first place. They have fed us propaganda on both ends, one telling us that I order to be civilized and part of a globalized economy that we had to privatize our water, communications transportation, sell the rights to our oil, diamonds, farm lands etc... the other telling us that to succeed in the music business that we have to sell our publishing, our masters, and sign 360 deals where they own the rights to our merchandise and a large % of our shows. This album is a vivid and up close and personal look at the two intertwined battles for independence. Burt besides criticizing the album is also self critical, not only of myself personally for the mistakes I made in life and those my friends around me have made, but what we as a people have done to prolong our own mental, physical and spiritual bondage. The fight is not just against invasion and occupation thought but we struggle within ourselves, as the album itself doesn't try to paint America as "the great satan" but rather as simply a corporate mechanism that has vavasour like representatives in places like Africa, Latin America and The Middle East. There the people who are oppressing us are ourselves, motivated by greed, avarice, and an overwhelming lust for power that created once asset allies turned fallguys like Manuel Noriega and Sadaam Hussein. In other words oppression is not so much about the mask of race that was created to justify the existence of a class system but now our own people are the same ones exploiting us. Just as in the music industry as well, because the manner in which they are educated to operate is no different from that of the people that have traditionally exploited us. The struggle for independence is not just a metaphor for what goes on in countries fighting for their hegemonic voice, but also for the will and the strength to be interpreted so by the very music that defines a people and a country. This struggle that is playing itself out between the resistance that fights for the culture and soul of Hip Hop opened my eyes to that fact that we are not outnumbered. Just not organized as well as we should be. I have traveled to many places South America, Central America, Africa, Europe, and the Caribbean and I look forward to building more solid frontiers with people who are doing the same where they are. Many told me that this war was impossible to win, and that the inevitable death of the substance left in this music and any music would come by force. But I, and the people I involved with this project such as Green Lantern who has been working on this with me since early 2007, and Southpaw as well as the few and proud over at Viper Records will not accept such a fate for our people. The 3rd World has a very diverse sound in its production and in the slew of guests I have asked to be a part of it. It also has a wide variety of concepts that are in the form of songs, which help to bring the story of this struggle to life. And even though it is an album in terms of being all original tracks Dj Green Lantern cut and blended the tracks together like a traditional mixtape. There are supporters of mine who have been waiting on other projects I promised, "The Middle Passage" and "Revolutionary Vol.3" two interestingly complicated projects that I am still working on and actually about half done with. This album was a bridge to the other albums that I have coming. It is a violent but lyrically saturated expression of music with a purpose and I thank all of the long time supporters of the message and the music for all that they have done in joining this Revolution that continues. Peace & Respect, Immortal Technique
Album Description Fiercely political Harlem-born MC Immortal Technique stormed onto hip-hop's stage in the early 2000s with some of the most outspoken and intelligently provocative rhymes since the heyday of Public Enemy. Attacking corporate greed and American imperialism, and touting numerous progressive causes in his lyrics, Technique can come off as much like an issue of the Nation magazine as he can a contemporary rapper. He nurtures the careers of like-minded rappers through his own Viper Records, and has collaborated with MCs such as KRS-One, Chuck D, and Mos Def. Technique's song "Bin Laden" sparked tremendous controversy upon its release, as it unflinchingly discussed the Bush administration's role in the 9/11 attacks.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 34 more reviews...
The 3rd World: Bringing it Home October 3, 2008 Nathan A. Wilkinson This album is awesome! I'm kind of biased, I'm a huge fan. Nevertheless, this album doesn't disappoint. Dj Green Lantern brings in a wide variety of tracks, a lot of jazzy stuff, that gives the album a great, almost old school feel. And of course, the lyrics are sophisticated, biting, sometimes funny, and always well-informed. Buy it! Support independent hip hop!
great pice of hip-hop September 16, 2008 Miguel Alejandro Robles Ambris (queretaro, mexico) immortal technique, artista hip-hop no a entregado a su publico una mala cancion hasta el dia de hoy, exelente album.
Pretty damn good September 16, 2008 P. Eakle (Big Oak Flat, Ca., United States) Lyrics: A- Production: B Guest Appearances: C+
Album overall: B+
Better than most...period. August 29, 2008 JOHN (SAN LORENZO, CA United States) Typical Green Lantern production, if you've heard any of his work with Eminem this will be similiar, could almost hear Em on these tracks...as far as Immortal technique goes this album is not as dark as some of his previous works, more about politics and how we deal with other countries. His voice has changed up a bit too, sounds like Nine from 1995 or so.
Kind of weak August 20, 2008 Trevor J. Edwards (Columbus, OH) 3 out of 5 found this review helpful
I, like many, came in to this album with pretty high hopes. This fell in to my lap after picking up a string of great hip-hop albums like Prolyphic & Reanimator's "The Ugly Truth" and Sadistik's "The Balancing Act" which further boosted my anticipation.
Having DJ Green Lantern as the major featured producer left me a little skeptical but I went ahead and got it anyways. My worries were justified, Green Lantern brought the large dose of generic beat making I had feared was going to ruin this album for me. What you're left with now is the same yawn-worthy club sound you'd expect to find on a 50 Cent album in a train wreck unison with socially relevant wordplay, it just doens't work for me. Even Southpaw, a producer I admired on previous Immortal Technique albums, seemed to lower the bar for himself on this album.
This lack of continuity made Immortal Technique's lack of progressive content stand out as well. He's beginning to sound less like somebody fighting the good fight and more like a tinfoil hat wearing conspiracy theorist clinging to the mistakes of days gone by. How many albums can he make about 9/11 and how much he hates Bush before he becomes that crazy old man rambling to himself? I've heard this all before and it's a little boring at this juncture. I was expecting to hear a lot more regarding his take on current world event and although there was a bit of that overall the lyrics of this album fealt recycled to me.
Is this the worst album I've ever heard? Not by a long shot but I personally wouldn't go out of my way to recommend it to my friends either. Overall it strikes me as just barely passable from an artist who has in the past repeatedly proven himself to be a pretty safe bet. Let's keep our fingers crossed for a better showing on Revolutionaries Vol. 3.
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