
The Force is a Hip-Hop album by LL Cool J, originally released in 2024. On Gatefold: 8 pressings tracked, owned by 3 collectors.
About
Sporting one of the most outsized personalities in all of hip-hop history, LL COOL J made rap braggadocio into an art form. During his mid-’80s emergence, the Queens-bred MC used his inherently aggressive delivery to prove himself bigger and deffer than the competition. In the ’90, he channeled that tenacity even more effectively on the seminal <i>Mama Said Knock You Out</i> and its gritty successor <i>14 Shots to the Dome</i> while increasingly amplifying his libidinous loverman side to great commercial effect. It worked so well that, by the time he popularized the term “GOAT” on his sexually charged 2000 album of the same name, few could argue he wasn’t a contender for that prestigious title. Yet those who arrived during James Todd Smith’s R&B crossover era, or the many more who’ve come to know him primarily as an actor on television and in film, may not know what a tremendous rapper he was—and remain. His first studio album in some 11 year, <i>THE FORCE</i> shows his microphone prowess has in no way waned over the past decade. There’s a core combativeness to his contemporary approach, unquestionably bolstered by the distressing and galvanizing events of recent year. Out the gate, on the Snoop Dogg-assisted “Spirit of Cyru,” he conjures a vivid Black vigilante fantasy where racists receive their comeuppances in brutal fashion. With a similarly vibrant Busta Rhymes in his corner, he outlines a revolutionary mindset on the thunderous “Huey in the Chair.” As should be expected with an artist with his tenure, he also reveals a sentimentally nostalgic streak in a number of instances here, calling back to his come-up on “Basquiat Energy” and realizing that the you-can’t-go-home-again axiom rings truer than expected on “30 December.” “Black Code Suite” synthesizes his tendencies quite beautifully, its Afrocentric bent mixing memory with militancy. .
via Apple Music
The Clerk says
The Clerk knows this whole record — the pressing quirks, the credits, the take.
Tracklist
- 1Spirit of Cyrus3:30
- 2The FORCE2:49
- 3Saturday Night Special3:28
- 4Black Code Suite4:26
- 5Passion2:29
- 6Proclivities3:39
- 7Post Modern2:09
- 830 Decembers3:26
- 9Runnit Back2:46
- 10Huey In The Chair2:24
- 11Basquiat Energy2:22
- 12Praise Him2:25
- 13Murdergram Deux (feat. Eminem)3:05
- 14The Vow (feat. Mad Squablz, J-S.A.N.D. & Don Pablito)4:35
Sound DNA
- Hip-Hop
- Boom Bap
- gritty
- swaggering
- urban
Credits
The people behind it.
Performers
- Q-TipDRUMS BASS PROGRAMMED BY
- Snoop DoggFEATURING
- Casey BenjaminKEYBOARDS
- Fat JoeFEATURING
- Rick RossFEATURING
- Caravan
- Sona JobartehBASS GUITAR FEATURING
- Moose Loose
- Eric AppapoulayVOCALS
- Herbie Hancock
- Mitsue BurnettVOCALS
- SaweetieFEATURING
- Gary Numan
- Blair WellsGUITAR
- Bob Smith
- Wigwam
- Ramsey Lewis
- Busta RhymesFEATURING
3 collectors on Gatefold own this · 8 pressings tracked on Gatefold
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