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$trick9 and the Truth : Mother Earth
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Political satire, supernatural poetry and gonzo journalism. Hip hop with live instrumentation.
Genre: Hip-Hop/Rap: Hip Hop
Release Date: 2008
Mother Earth Record Label: white poison industries
  • Download Album (MP3) - $9.00
  • Buy CD - $9.00
SPECIAL: 20% discount if you buy more than one copy of it today!
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
Mother Earth 4:05 $0.99
White Lies 3:44 $0.99
A Modest Proposal 3:39 $0.99
Baby Maker 3:23 $0.99
Lil Iqbal 7:30 $0.99
An Mc 0:45 $0.99
ill 3:44 $0.99
I Lost My Bitch 4:45 $0.99
The Boomstick 4:55 $0.99
Big Dub 4:27 $0.99
Hitler Style 5:22 $0.99
Mushroom Clouds 3:34 $0.99
Duke's Final Thought 1:53 $0.99
Des Moines in December 5:46 $0.99
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Album Notes

"As an English teacher I'm always looking for ways to help my students relate to and understand the literature we study by connecting the literature to their world," says Pamela Bradley, from Santa Susana High School. "$trick9's "Modest Proposal" is an intellectually astute modernization of a classic work. While staying true to the ideas in Swift's 'Modest Proposal', Strick9 offers up music that is hip, fresh, and entertaining. My students love it! A+ Strick9!"

Unlike most hip hop acts, the beat is not laid down by a DJ or a drum machine, rather by a live band known as The Truth. Drawing from vastly divergent backgrounds, The Truth belt it out thick and funky.

"If Jonathan Swift and Stephen Colbert had a kid, they'd probably both feel a little queasy afterward. But if that baby survived his second year and grew up to be an MC named $trick9, we'd like to think they'd shed a tear of pride when he dropped rhymes like this," said Scott Alexander, Playboy senior editor.

The only guest appearance on Mother Earth is with former Iowa gubernatorial candidate Ed Fallon. Lil Iqbal is the true story of a child laborer named Iqbal Masih who spoke out against sweatshops in the mid 1990s.

"America's shopping habits hurt the poorest of the poor in ways most of us who live in comfort can't imagine," said Fallon. "Globalization's casualties are many -- and mostly dark-skinned. Hit especially hard are the poor and young, children like Iqbal, who suffer and sometimes die for the sin of cheap stuff. Through his art, $trick9 challenges all of us to pay attention and adjust our lives accordingly."

The architecture of Mother Earth was first drafted through a set of demos, tracked in the early spring of 2007. Using combination of live sets and basement demo tapes, the track list was created and the album's direction was born.

"It's a complete album," said Duke. "All of the great elements of storytelling are presented in a cohesive piece. This is what has been missing in music for years."

And that's no understatement. The album is meticulously thought through, designed as a continuous act, changing and evolving.

"I think we've created an experience," said $trick9. "It's not just a collection of hot dance tracks."

The songs bounce, forcibly exerting the power of the lyrics they pave.

"We had played live shows using a batch of songs we had put on an earlier EP," said $trick9. "Most of the songs were still evolving and the writing process was well underway. By the time we were ready to hit the studio, we had a real catalog to work from."

From the original batch of songs, $trick9 & The Truth culled the final fourteen and headed into Capp Audio Productions studio in early July of 2007 to begin tracking the album.

"It seemed to go by really quickly," said Matty J. "Maybe we were just really organized."

Through the sessions, the band captured the energy of their live show, while crafting a precise sonic experience.

"Everything is cohesive, thick and warm," said Billbotics. "The rhythms pulsate. It's unlike 99.9% of the hip-hop you hear these days. I'm not going to say it's like Pink Floyd rapping, but it is atmospheric and heavy, all at the same time."

"It's the bomb," says $trick9, "but it."

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REVIEWS

What wicked fruit Mother Earth has sown
author: Aaron Roberson
We live in a cursed age, of this there can be no doubt. Even recent events prove this to be so, from cyclones in Burma to massive earthquakes in China. And then there are the great man-made disasters such as sweatshop labor and widespread human rights abuses. With all of these calamities in the world, why would we possibly need to add more burden to our already overtaxed capacity for human suffering. But man is a strange creature, separated from the rest of the animal kingdom by it’s unique predilection towards self destruction. And it is exactly this unnatural, primordial urge to dive into that abyss that brings us things like $trick9 and the Truth. I would say that if there was a god, surely he would save us from such abominations But clearly there can be no god. God has either died or abandoned us to our own wretchedness. Yes, all that is good and holy has left us and only $trick9 remains.
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