- Bumper
- Fuck Your Stuff
- How We Land
- Wanted/Wasted
- They Can¿¿¿t Come
- Lock-picks, Knives, Bricks and Bats
- Fire in the Hole/Arrow to the Action
- Get Down
- All of It
- Weird Friends (We Don¿¿¿t Even Live Here)
- Piano Hits
5
1
0826257015815
Astronautalis Primary Artist,Vocals,Featured Artist
Busdriver Primary Artist
Justin Vernon Primary Artist,Featured Artist
Isaac Gale Primary Artist,Featured Artist
Sims Primary Artist,Featured Artist
Mike Mictlan Primary Artist,Featured Artist
Justin Courtney Pierre Vocals
Jessy Greene Violin
Ben Ivascu Drums
Chris Lee Drums
La Manchita Vocals
Boys Noize Producer
Housemeister Producer
P.O.S Producer
Lazerbeak Producer
Andrew Dawson Mixing,Engineer,Producer,Additional Production
S. Daley Executive Producer
Doug Lefrak Management
Ryan Olson Producer
Cecil Otter Producer
Isaac Gale Photography
Eric Timothy Carlson Design,Artwork
Kelly Loverud Photography
Max Plisskin Mixing Assistant
Charles Andrew Bothwell Photography
John Grider Photography
Patric Russel Producer
Shannon Schlappi Management
Stef Alexander Photography


Vinyl LP(Long Playing Record)
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Overview
The idea of "punk rap" rarely feels as real and needed as it does when the twitchy "Bumper" opens rapper and Doomtree member P.O.S' fourth official release, We Don't Even Live Here, a literate, sharp blast of revolution with an anarchist slant. Torching material possessions, "Fuck Your Stuff" displays this slant in detail with "Catch me in a mission, pissin' in a convertible trying to create some tension/Open a book, discuss Christopher Hitchens, or how to make bombs out of stuff found in your kitchen." The attitude often seems to be that there's no such thing as an innocent bystander, but Justin Vernon of Bon Iver is here to deliver the rock-solid pop hook of highlight "How We Land," making this a rather seductive entry point into the land of no justice/no peace. When "They Can't Come" rolls around with a bouncing bass and old-school shine, it sounds more like a rent party than a leftist Red party, and as busy as P.O.S' writing style can be, this album is economical and easy at 11 tracks, offering both a prime end-to-end album with plenty of flow, or a right-sized selection of stand-out blows against the empire, ready with kinetic bits of anger, information, and mind-opening bullet points to discuss. Start with the aptly titled "Get Down" with Mike Mictlan and P.O.S offering an electro re-imagining of the Bad Brains, or choose the block-rockin' "They Can't Come," a thick anthem with Sims that looks to "clash with their whole set of standards" and makes it sound delicious. Maybe there's a touch more swagger than solutions on the set, but Minneapolis' secret weapon really should have saved the title of his previous set, Never Better, for this one. ~ David Jeffries
Product Details
Release Date: | 10/22/2012 |
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Label: | RHYMESAYERS |
UPC: | 0826257015815 |
Tracks
Album Credits
Performance Credits
P.O.S Primary ArtistAstronautalis Primary Artist,Vocals,Featured Artist
Busdriver Primary Artist
Justin Vernon Primary Artist,Featured Artist
Isaac Gale Primary Artist,Featured Artist
Sims Primary Artist,Featured Artist
Mike Mictlan Primary Artist,Featured Artist
Justin Courtney Pierre Vocals
Jessy Greene Violin
Ben Ivascu Drums
Chris Lee Drums
La Manchita Vocals
Technical Credits
Chris Athens MasteringBoys Noize Producer
Housemeister Producer
P.O.S Producer
Lazerbeak Producer
Andrew Dawson Mixing,Engineer,Producer,Additional Production
S. Daley Executive Producer
Doug Lefrak Management
Ryan Olson Producer
Cecil Otter Producer
Isaac Gale Photography
Eric Timothy Carlson Design,Artwork
Kelly Loverud Photography
Max Plisskin Mixing Assistant
Charles Andrew Bothwell Photography
John Grider Photography
Patric Russel Producer
Shannon Schlappi Management
Stef Alexander Photography
From the B&N Reads Blog
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