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Live at the Fillmore
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Live at the Fillmore
Current price: $14.99
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Barnes and Noble
Live at the Fillmore
Current price: $14.99
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While
Cypress Hill
's
Skull & Bones
album showcased their sudden interest in merging
hard rock
with
rap
,
Live at the Fillmore
stands as a better testament to the group's newfound ability to synthesize the two styles into an invigorating formula. The album gets off to a fiery start with some rowdy renditions of the group's early-'90s material --
"Hand on the Pump,"
"How I Could Just Kill a Man,"
"Insane in the Brain"
-- before the sound of
heavy metal
guitars appears mid-set. Besides integrating guitar riffs into
Muggs
' already adrenalized beats, the group reinterprets older songs such as
"A to the K,"
making them sound new. Of course,
wouldn't be
without their adamant smoking advocacy, and starting with the trippy siren intro to
"I Wanna Get High,"
the group moves through a medley of bud-smoking songs before the mosh-inciting conclusion of
"Riot Starter"
and
"(Rock) Superstar."
~ Jason Birchmeier
Cypress Hill
's
Skull & Bones
album showcased their sudden interest in merging
hard rock
with
rap
,
Live at the Fillmore
stands as a better testament to the group's newfound ability to synthesize the two styles into an invigorating formula. The album gets off to a fiery start with some rowdy renditions of the group's early-'90s material --
"Hand on the Pump,"
"How I Could Just Kill a Man,"
"Insane in the Brain"
-- before the sound of
heavy metal
guitars appears mid-set. Besides integrating guitar riffs into
Muggs
' already adrenalized beats, the group reinterprets older songs such as
"A to the K,"
making them sound new. Of course,
wouldn't be
without their adamant smoking advocacy, and starting with the trippy siren intro to
"I Wanna Get High,"
the group moves through a medley of bud-smoking songs before the mosh-inciting conclusion of
"Riot Starter"
and
"(Rock) Superstar."
~ Jason Birchmeier