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Jeru The Damaja - The Sun Rises In The East download mp3 flac


Performer: Jeru The Damaja
Genre: Hip hop
Album: The Sun Rises In The East
Released: 1994
Style: Conscious
MP3 version ZIP size: 1482 mb
FLAC version RAR size: 1774 mb
WMA version ZIP size: 1756 mb
Rating: 4.4
Votes: 747
Other Formats: AAC AHX VQF MPC WMA FLAC XM

Free Download Jeru The Damaja - The Sun Rises In The East

Jeru The Damaja - The Sun Rises In The East
MP3 version .RAR archive

1482 downloads at 17 mb/s
Jeru The Damaja - The Sun Rises In The East
FLAC version .RAR archive

1774 downloads at 13 mb/s
Jeru The Damaja - The Sun Rises In The East
WMA version .RAR archive

1756 downloads at 14 mb/s

Tracklist

1 Intro (Life) 0:50
2 D.Original 3:35
3 Brooklyn Took It 3:22
4 Perverted Monks In Tha House (Skit) 1:13
5 Mental Stamina 2:21
6 Da Bichez 3:51
7 You Can't Stop The Prophet 3:54
8 Perverted Monks In Tha House (Theme) 1:02
9 Ain't The Devil Happy 3:44
10 My Mind Spray 3:44
11 Come Clean 4:57
12 Jungle Music 3:50
13 Statik 3:07

Companies, etc.

  • Phonographic Copyright (p) – FFRR
  • Copyright (c) – FFRR
  • Record Company – London Records 90 Ltd.
  • Marketed By – Barclay
  • Marketed By – Metronome Musik GmbH
  • Recorded At – D&D Studios
  • Mixed At – D&D Studios
  • Mastered At – Masterdisk
  • Designed At – Cartel
  • Made By – PMDC, Germany

Credits

  • A&R – Dino Delvaille
  • Art Direction, Photography By – Daniel Hastings
  • Design – Miguel Rivera
  • Engineer – Eddie Sancho
  • Engineer [Assistant] – Dave Carpenter*, Luis Tineo, Max Vargus*
  • Executive-Producer – Gangstarr*
  • Illustration – Hugo Bravo
  • Mastered By – Tony Dawsey
  • Mixed By – D.J. Premier*, Eddie Sancho
  • Producer – D.J. Premier*, Kendrick Jeru Davis
  • Typography [Type Design] – Cortes*

Notes

Produced for Gangstarr Productions Inc.

Recorded and mixed at D&D Recording Studio, New York, New York. Mastered at Masterdisk, New York. Artwork and photography done at Cartel.

Track 5 contains a sample from "Sensitize" by Roy Ayers
Track 10 contains a sample from "Nautilus" by Bob James

℗ 1994 FFRR except track 11 ℗ 1993 FFRR © 1994 FFRR
The copyright in this sound recording is owned by London Records 90 Ltd. Marketed in France by Barclay & in Germany by Metronome Musik GmbH.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode (Text): 0 42282 85262 5
  • Matrix / Runout: 8285262 01291981 02 &
  • Matrix / Runout (CD Mould): MADE IN THE U.K. BY PDO

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
697-124-011-2 Jeru The Damaja The Sun Rises In The East ‎(CD, Album) Payday, FFRR 697-124-011-2 US 1994
697-124-011-1 Jeru The Damaja The Sun Rises In The East ‎(2xLP, Album, Ltd) Payday, FFRR 697-124-011-1 US 1994
697 124 011-2 Jeru The Damaja The Sun Rises In The East ‎(CD, Album) Payday, FFRR 697 124 011-2 US Unknown
P4 24011 Jeru The Damaja The Sun Rises In The East ‎(Cass, Album, Club) Payday, FFRR P4 24011 US 1994
422-828 526-2 Jeru The Damaja The Sun Rises In The East ‎(CD, Album) Payday, FFRR 422-828 526-2 Canada 1994

Bine
straight copacetic beats rhymes and overall NY badness buy on sight

hulk
Aceyalone is a great MC , but IMO not on Jeru's level lyrically. Jeru is a true lyricist mabie not on GZA's level but his wordplay and delivery is almost impeccable, everyone is entitled to their opinionand mine Iis Jeru is a lyricist

Punind
Similar to my fellow reviewer, I accidentally stumbled across this one as well, just a few days ago. I had basically forgotten that an MC called Jeru The Damaja had ever existed. It wasn't the name of the artist or the album which had caught my eye, but it was the cover art, with one of the Twin Towers in flames. Oh the irony, and this album is from 1994. The cover art might depict a projection of what would have happenned to the World Trade Center if the bombing was executed in a manner it was supposed to be. Leaving all political and sociological aspects aside, I put "The sun rises in the east" on, and what a walk down memory lane it was! Jeru was never a complex lyricst, and comes nowhere near hip hop luminaries such as Alcyone, GZA or the Organized Konfusion duo, but what he has is an impeccable, raw flow, with tough, honest, witty, thoughtful and at times entertaining rhymes which take no prisoners. Taking his sound to the deepest chambers of New York underground, he raps about the street life (was before it became a washed out cliche), on tracks Da Bichez, You Can't Stop The Prophet and Ain't The Devil Happy he mocks the (back then) upcoming commercialization of the hip hop culture, and obsessions with the thug mentality, AK toting, hoe slapping and what not else. Jeru is vivid in his descriptions while maintaining a steadily blunt, if not agressive attitude in his delivery. Despite it all, this album wouldn't have half of its charm if the man behind the production wasn't DJ Premier. Simply said, and looking back from modern perspective while keeping his entire production opus in mind, he most probably outdid himself. As much as his jazzy beats and trademark verses consisting of scratched in samples from other artists gained him fame with his main, Gang Starr project, my opinion is that his credentials have sky rocketed once this album hit the streets. His rawest, deepest and most daring beats can be found here, his DJ skills shine to the fullest wherever he applies them, and that is that! The standout number is naturally the evergreen underground smash anthem Come Clean, with stentorian production vaults - the drum kicks sound as though every kick was accompanied by a drop of water falling from the ceiling on the center of the floor in an isolated, abbandoned warehouse! And those timeless samples from Onyx "heads up 'cause we droppin' some shit!" emphasized with heavy scratching only add to the overall greatness. I am really glad I found this one. New York's underground hip hop at its finest. Recommended to all lovers of Premier's sound, but especially to fans of early nineties hip hop, who reckon you don't have to toss 20000 monopoly paper bills in the air during your video in order to be a great hip hop artist. Ah, the days when hip hop wasn't strictly divided between MTV teen idols and underground heroes jotting down prophecies in their notepads, dug and stuck so deep under ground barely anybody bothers to go check them out... A pity. This album, however, is everything but! A true classic!

Kearanny
the wtc was bombed in 1993...not ironic at all haha

Gralsa
I was digging through my collection and came upon this CD. This is another classic, groundbreaking album. Jeru lays cleverly crafted conscious lyrics over classic Premier beats. Jeru was already spearheading the movement against pop in rap music, and the ignorance that plagues certain elements of hip-hop culture My favorites on this one are "Come Clean," "Mind Spray" and "Ain't The Devil Happy." If you love classic hip-hop, you will love this album.