X-Clan - To The East, Blackwards album flac
Performer: X-ClanTitle: To The East, Blackwards
Style: Conscious
Released: 1990
MP3 album: 1358 mb
FLAC album: 1829 mb
Rating: 4.9
Other formats: WMA DXD MOD ASF TTA MMF AU
Genre: Hip-hop
To The East, Blackwards is the debut studio album by American hip hop group X Clan, released on April 24, 1990, by 4th & B'way Records and Island Records. It was produced entirely by the group and recorded at . Recording Studios in New York City. To the East, Blackwards charted at number 97 on the Billboard Top Pop Albums. Raise the Flag", the album's lead single, peaked at number 12 on the Hot Rap Singles.
Complete your X-Clan collection. The debut album from X-Clan.
X-Clan - To The East, Blackwards (1990). Straight Orange Male. Tribal Jam (Album Version). UMG (от лица компании "Island Records"); LatinAutor, UMPG Publishing, UBEM, BMI - Broadcast Music In. LatinAutor - UMPG. A Day Of Outrage, Operation Snatchback (Album Version).
Listen free to X Clan – To The East, Blackwards. Discover more music, concerts, videos, and pictures with the largest catalogue online at Last. To The East, Blackwards. Overview (current section).
Take X-Clan's debut album, To The East, Blackwards. The New York four-piece weren't the first band to come out of hip hop's golden age talking about black nationalism or rallying fans behind political campaigns; the songs on the record didn't upend hip hop's conventions or signal a radical new sound or style for a genre that, at the time, seemed to deal in cycles of innovation. that were measured in hours, not years
Exclusive discount for Prime members. Sample this album Artist (Sample). I was wondering what the x-clan sounded like and it was great experience once I listened to the album. It was different and refreshing.
To The East, Blackwards. To The East, Blackwards Tracklist. 1. Funkin' Lesson Lyrics.
The self-sufficient X Clan should've made a bigger splash with To the East, Blackwards, the group's debut album for 4th & Broadway. Name-dropping Nat Turner and Marcus Garvey and dressing in red, black, and green instead of black and silver didn't exactly lend itself to marketability in 1990, but there's no evidence to the contrary that this Afrocentric group released one of the best rap records that year - which is saying a great deal.
When To The East, Blackwards dropped, I had been listening to BBD’s first album (Tribe’s was a week old). I’m not ashamed to admit that I listened to that X-Clan album more than anything else. More than Tribe and more than Fear of a Black Planet (which had been released two weeks prior). I listened to X-Clan day and night. On my way to school and on my way home from my job at Foot Locker. The lyrics became a part of me and Sayyed’s vocabulary. I loved that albu. ut y. ain’t neve. ve. anted to look like X-Clan and that’s how I knew I was growing.
With, "To the East, Blackwards", X-Clan put out one of the best Afro-Centric hip hop albums ever. Not only are the lyrics important for it's time, but the production on this album is great and still very enjoyable to date. On tracks such as "Grand Verbalizer, What Time is It?", "A Day of Outrage, Operation Snatchback", "Verbal Milk", "Heed the Word of The Brother", the production on this along with Brother J's rapping is very dope.









