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Extinction Level Event 2: The Wrath of God
Barnes and Noble
Extinction Level Event 2: The Wrath of God
Current price: $13.99
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Barnes and Noble
Extinction Level Event 2: The Wrath of God
Current price: $13.99
Size: CD
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Hip-hop legend
Busta Rhymes
spent the better part of a decade without a new studio album, issuing only mixtapes and singles after 2012's
Year of the Dragon
. With over 30 years in the game and countless iconic hits, he could have slipped quietly into retirement, but instead comes back louder than ever on his tenth studio album,
Extinction Level Event 2: The Wrath of God
. The 22-track set finds
Busta
delivering his time-tested bombastic flows over old-school East Coast production and wrangling in a dizzying number of big-name guests to help out. These guest features result in some of the record's best moments, like when longtime peer
Q-Tip
hops on the smooth, even-tempered "Don't Go" or when
Kendrick Lamar
kicks off the sentimental,
Jackson 5
-sampling "Look Over Your Shoulder" with a head-spinningly complex, scattershot verse. Even on tracks where the instrumentals are relatively relaxed, like the slow-burning R&B-based "You Will Never Find Another Me,"
stays in beast mode, throwing out high-energy bars between passionate choruses sung by
Mary J. Blige
.
E.L.E. 2
is tied together loosely by themes of apocalypse and humankind atoning for their wrongdoings at the end of the world. This gives
's already aggressive approach an especially ominous atmosphere, particularly when he's shouting lyrics about the end of days and secret societies operating in the shadows on "Satanic" or giving a sermon over the course of a seven-minute intro. A lengthy spoken monologue from
Louis Farrakhan
recorded exclusively for the album amplifies the intensity already established by songs centered around political rhetoric and dark visions. This intensity is broken up by some lighter moments, however, with
Anderson .Paak
stopping by on the sleek, electro-tinged "Yuuuu" and
flipping the beat of
Bell Biv DeVoe
's '90s classic "Poison" for the rowdy party starter "Outta My Mind." ~ Fred Thomas
Busta Rhymes
spent the better part of a decade without a new studio album, issuing only mixtapes and singles after 2012's
Year of the Dragon
. With over 30 years in the game and countless iconic hits, he could have slipped quietly into retirement, but instead comes back louder than ever on his tenth studio album,
Extinction Level Event 2: The Wrath of God
. The 22-track set finds
Busta
delivering his time-tested bombastic flows over old-school East Coast production and wrangling in a dizzying number of big-name guests to help out. These guest features result in some of the record's best moments, like when longtime peer
Q-Tip
hops on the smooth, even-tempered "Don't Go" or when
Kendrick Lamar
kicks off the sentimental,
Jackson 5
-sampling "Look Over Your Shoulder" with a head-spinningly complex, scattershot verse. Even on tracks where the instrumentals are relatively relaxed, like the slow-burning R&B-based "You Will Never Find Another Me,"
stays in beast mode, throwing out high-energy bars between passionate choruses sung by
Mary J. Blige
.
E.L.E. 2
is tied together loosely by themes of apocalypse and humankind atoning for their wrongdoings at the end of the world. This gives
's already aggressive approach an especially ominous atmosphere, particularly when he's shouting lyrics about the end of days and secret societies operating in the shadows on "Satanic" or giving a sermon over the course of a seven-minute intro. A lengthy spoken monologue from
Louis Farrakhan
recorded exclusively for the album amplifies the intensity already established by songs centered around political rhetoric and dark visions. This intensity is broken up by some lighter moments, however, with
Anderson .Paak
stopping by on the sleek, electro-tinged "Yuuuu" and
flipping the beat of
Bell Biv DeVoe
's '90s classic "Poison" for the rowdy party starter "Outta My Mind." ~ Fred Thomas