Project Pat Crook By Da Book The Fed Story Raritan

Project Pat Crook By Da Book The Fed Story Raritan Rating: 6,8/10 6995votes
Project Pat Crook By Da BookProject Pat

Three 6 Mafia affiliate Project Pat releases his fourth solo album, Crook By Da Book: The Fed Story. The Sony Urban disc features guest appearances from Beanie Sigel. Listen free to Project Pat – Crook by da Book: The Fed Story (Intro, I Ain't Goin' Back To Jail and more). 20 tracks (69:07). Discover more music, concerts, videos. Driver Nvidia Model P561006 there. Nickname(s): 'Borough of Trees' 'First Borough of Bergen County' Map highlighting Rutherford's location within Bergen County. Inset: Bergen County's location within. Haddon craftsmen book dist hallton hampden station hampden twp hanover twp harleysville insurance co. Us court appeal fed circuit us holocaust memorial museum.

The unexpected triumph of Three 6 Mafia’s DJ Paul and Juicy J at the 2005 Oscars and the ubiquity of celebratory anthems like “Stay Fly” brought Memphis’ vibrant hip-hop scene some much-needed popular recognition. Project Pat's menacing flow and tongue-twisting lyricism have made him a standout member of Three 6 Mafia’s Hypnotized Minds clique. Crook By da Book: The Fed Story certainly contains enough giddily morbid lyricism, funereal tempos, and Willie Hutch-fueled hooks to satisfy any diehard fan, but Pat’s album is distinguished from the common run of Hypnotized Minds releases by his mind-numbingly formidable cadences. Where other Memphis MCs might be content to simply flow over Juicy J’s sinister production work, Project Pat’s hallucinatory rhymes and relentlessly fluid cadences provide the perfect counterpoint to Juicy J’s icy synths. The combination of these two talents produces some incredible moments; the hypnotic chants of “I Ain’t Going Back to Jail” and the eerie Spaghetti Western whistles of “Crack a Head” take the bleak aesthetics of Memphis hip-hop to previously unimagined heights. The unexpected triumph of Three 6 Mafia’s DJ Paul and Juicy J at the 2005 Oscars and the ubiquity of celebratory anthems like “Stay Fly” brought Memphis’ vibrant hip-hop scene some much-needed popular recognition.