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Bronze Nazareth's The Great Migration rings old bells of glory. Loud at times and even louder others. It's been awhile since Killarmy and the Gravediggaz were standing as proud sprouts of the original swagger generals. Since then nothing and nobody from the Wu has really taken the initiative to build past what history's already seen done. Bronze has. Production credits on the Wu Tang Think Differently "Wu Tang Meets Indie" project signaled something new, bold and raw. From bottom to top the beats are never less than knocking. I'm talking about "in the heat of the moment" bed rocking, knocking. Although the content of the Wu, especially now a days remains hit or miss for many, Bronze keeps it remotely close to hitting. Guest spots from Wu affiliates Timbo King, Killa Sin (!!!) 12 O'Clock and Prodigal Sunn keep the LP tightly woven in styling. All around this is a solid pickup if you see it sitting in Amoeba's used lots. Migration has begun I can happily conclude that the Wu is still reinventing the gritty.
Beat: "Here What I Say"
Verbal: "Black Royalty"
Coincidence SANsei