Mobb Deep Free Agents Mixtape Download

View credits, reviews, track listings and more about the 2003 US CD release of Free Agents: The Murda Mixtape by Mobb Deep.

Mobb Deep Free Agents Mixtape Free Download

In hip hop's earliest days, the music only existed in live form, and the music was spread via tapes of parties and shows. Hip hop mixtapes first appeared in the mid-1970s in New York City, featuring artists such as Kool Herc and Afrika Bambaataa. As more tapes became available, they began to be collected and traded by fans. In the late 70's into the early 80's DJs began recording mixtapes out of their homes, referring to them as House Tapes. DJs such as Harold G. (who later became known as Whiz Kid) and DJ Super V would create personalized House Tapes which would eventually circulate throughout New York City. In the mid-1980s, DJs, such as Brucie B, began recording their live music and selling their own mixtapes, which was soon followed by other DJs such as Kid Capri and Doo Wop. Ron G moved the mixtape forward in the early 1990s by blending R&B a cappellas with hip hop beats (known as 'blends'). Blend tapes became increasingly popular by the mid-1990s, and fans increasingly looked for exclusive tracks and freestyles on the tapes. Also since the 1990s, it describes releases used to promote one or more new artists, or as a pre-release by more established artists to promote upcoming 'official' albums. In the hip hop scene, mix tape is often displayed as a single term mixtape. It is now a word to generally describe full-length albums released for free, which is the modern form of mixtape that was made a popular following by 50 Cent and his group G-Unit in the early 2000s, sometimes containing all original music, other times composed of freestyles and remixes of popular tracks.

Unlike many high-profile CD 'mix tapes,' which are often little more than sloppily edited various-artists compilations with a bit of overdubbed, superfluous self-aggrandizement thrown in for good measure, FREE AGENTS:THE MURDA MIXTAPE comes within shooting distance of being a fully realized album. In fact, the disc signals a return to form of sorts for Mobb Deep, a group that disappointed some core fans by moving in a slightly more mainstream direction with 2001's INFAMY. As on the Mobb's masterpiece THE INFAMOUS, Prodigy and Havoc deliver a straight-up slab of no-frills East Coast gangsta rap. The similarity is not coincidental, as the disc is a mixture of brand new material, re-worked versions of classic tracks and remixes. In several cases, the group even creates completely new songs using old instrumental tracks as a basis. Throughout, Mobb Deep and its producers utilize their trademark bleak musical backdrops and plainspoken, harshly cinematic rapping style to utterly chilling effect.

SampleTitle/ComposerPerformerTime
1 00:34
2 03:58
3 02:32
4 03:18
5 03:21
6 02:35
7 03:09
8
feat: Dog
03:49
9 02:58
10 03:42
11 00:27
12 03:45
13 03:00
14 02:05
15 02:19
16 01:44
17 00:42
18 01:54
19 03:07
20 02:06
21
Dennis Coles / Albert Johnson / Kejuan Muchita / C. Woods
02:19
22 02:10
Mobb
SampleTitle/ComposerPerformerTime
1 03:57
2 03:35
3 03:17
4 03:37
5
feat: The Alchemist / Twin & Evidence / 1st Infantry / Prodigy / The Prodigy
04:54
6
feat: 1st Infantry
03:40
7
feat: Noyd
03:15
8
feat: Havoc / Noyd
03:27
9
feat: 50 Cent / Havoc / Noyd
04:04
10 00:38
11 04:24
12 03:59
13 04:23
14 03:03
15 03:55
16 04:15
17 03:10
18 03:50
19 03:52

Mobb Deep Free Agents Murda Mixtape

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