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- Summary: This is the fourth LP (and first released by Epitaph) for the indie-minded Minneapolis-based duo of Slug and Ant.
- Record Label: Epitaph
- Genre(s): Indie, Rap
- More Details and Credits »
Top Track
Always Coming Back Home To You | |
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To all my killers and my hundred dollar billers To emo kids that got too many feelings He held the register open while he counted her change I was... | See the rest of the song lyrics |
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Score distribution:
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Positive: 13 out of 16
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Mixed: 2 out of 16
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Negative: 1 out of 16
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SpinAtmosphere's least frantic, most playful album. [Nov 2003, p.114]
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Bristles with the independent spirit that put both punk and hip-hop on the map.
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BlenderSlug pushes against the beat like he's afraid it'll pass by before he's done, returning to the challenges of coupledom. [Oct 2003, p.114]
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I suppose that this isnt the album a lot of people were probably hoping for. But its never the album people were hoping for.
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Though it's not the emotionally draining follow-up many were expecting, Seven's Travels succeeds. Its saving grace is the fact that Slug and Ant remain ignorant of, or choose to completely ignore, the hip-hop conventions that have handcuffed similar artists for almost a decade.
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It is far too lengthy to function as a coherent hip-hop record.
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Life is too short to spend valuable time with a record as essentially inessential as Seven's Travels.
Score distribution:
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Positive: 21 out of 24
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Mixed: 1 out of 24
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Negative: 2 out of 24
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brettJan 2, 2007
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iLoVeSluGNov 15, 2003
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briansOct 17, 2003i don't even know how to hold it. it was a 38, the old man's machette
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chrisoMar 26, 2004this album is great and that is all that needs to be said
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JdubZOct 30, 2003
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DarrenSep 24, 2003
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RobNNov 10, 2004
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