Reverberations Of A Dead Man's Ego (Vinyl)

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Side A

A 01. Key To Life

A 02. Ballad of the Has Been

A 03. Statues Crumble

A 04. Vulture Stones ft. sleepingdogs

A 05. Bad Seeds

A 06. Imposter ft. BATERIA aka Jedi Son of Spock

A 07. Murder by Numbers ft. PremRock & Fatboi Sharif

Side B

B 08. Neromancer

B 09. Göbekli Tepe ft. Curly Castro & John Robinson

B 10. Until We Make the Unconscious Conscious It Will Direct Our Lives and We'll Call It Fate

B 11. Hunnid Dollar Bills

B 12. Mild for the Night

B 13. Disappearing Acts ft. Zilla Rocca and Cryptic One

1B 4. I Don’t Care No More 

B 15. Reverberations Of A Dead Man’s Ego

CREDITS:

All songs written & performed by Alaska * features noted

All scratches by Marcus Pinn

Photography by Mike McAuley

All songs produced, engineered & mixed by steel tipped dove


-

When an emcee finds a producer who fuels his verbals, he keeps him close. Atoms Fam, Hangar 18, and Def Jux alumnus, Alaska found just such a fire in steel tipped dove on last year’s The Structural Dynamics of Flow. A journeyman in the pits, dove’s credits run way below the surface of things, and his pedigree shows in his ability to keep the rig moving no matter. Once again on the black circles is the inimitable Marcus Pinn, steady adding nitrous to the mix. Over numerous releases in the last few years including two from 2023 alone, Alaska has settled into a style as mature as it is versatile. He knows the course comfortably now, so he can take the turns, open it up, and just drive.

Along for the ride this time are PremRock and Curly Castro (a.k.a. ShrapKnel), who with Zilla Rocca, make up three-fourths of the Wrecking Crew. All appear on different tracks here, not that keeping them separated blunts their impact in the least. Prem and The Prophet, Fatboi Sharif, are Alaska’s accomplices on “Murder by Numbers,” and fellow Atoms Family member Cryptic One joins Zilla and Alaska on “Disappearing Acts.” There’s also Bateria, a.k.a Jedi Son of Spock, on “Imposter” and Sleeping Dogs on “Vulture Stones,” among others. Those guys are all undeniably dope, but they’re only passengers here.

Alaska never lets you forget who’s behind the wheel as he drops lyrical references to everything from classic slashers and Wu-Tang to Violent Femmes and Hunter S. Thompson. It’s fun, but it’s serious. You can feel the aging aches of “Mild for the Night” in your lower back. You can also feel the frustration on “Hundred Dollar Bills” when Alaska raps, “Yeah, I’m a nihilist, but only ‘cause I’m tired of shit.” Word to the dead man’s ego.

  • Roy Christopher

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Side A

A 01. Key To Life

A 02. Ballad of the Has Been

A 03. Statues Crumble

A 04. Vulture Stones ft. sleepingdogs

A 05. Bad Seeds

A 06. Imposter ft. BATERIA aka Jedi Son of Spock

A 07. Murder by Numbers ft. PremRock & Fatboi Sharif

Side B

B 08. Neromancer

B 09. Göbekli Tepe ft. Curly Castro & John Robinson

B 10. Until We Make the Unconscious Conscious It Will Direct Our Lives and We'll Call It Fate

B 11. Hunnid Dollar Bills

B 12. Mild for the Night

B 13. Disappearing Acts ft. Zilla Rocca and Cryptic One

1B 4. I Don’t Care No More 

B 15. Reverberations Of A Dead Man’s Ego

CREDITS:

All songs written & performed by Alaska * features noted

All scratches by Marcus Pinn

Photography by Mike McAuley

All songs produced, engineered & mixed by steel tipped dove


-

When an emcee finds a producer who fuels his verbals, he keeps him close. Atoms Fam, Hangar 18, and Def Jux alumnus, Alaska found just such a fire in steel tipped dove on last year’s The Structural Dynamics of Flow. A journeyman in the pits, dove’s credits run way below the surface of things, and his pedigree shows in his ability to keep the rig moving no matter. Once again on the black circles is the inimitable Marcus Pinn, steady adding nitrous to the mix. Over numerous releases in the last few years including two from 2023 alone, Alaska has settled into a style as mature as it is versatile. He knows the course comfortably now, so he can take the turns, open it up, and just drive.

Along for the ride this time are PremRock and Curly Castro (a.k.a. ShrapKnel), who with Zilla Rocca, make up three-fourths of the Wrecking Crew. All appear on different tracks here, not that keeping them separated blunts their impact in the least. Prem and The Prophet, Fatboi Sharif, are Alaska’s accomplices on “Murder by Numbers,” and fellow Atoms Family member Cryptic One joins Zilla and Alaska on “Disappearing Acts.” There’s also Bateria, a.k.a Jedi Son of Spock, on “Imposter” and Sleeping Dogs on “Vulture Stones,” among others. Those guys are all undeniably dope, but they’re only passengers here.

Alaska never lets you forget who’s behind the wheel as he drops lyrical references to everything from classic slashers and Wu-Tang to Violent Femmes and Hunter S. Thompson. It’s fun, but it’s serious. You can feel the aging aches of “Mild for the Night” in your lower back. You can also feel the frustration on “Hundred Dollar Bills” when Alaska raps, “Yeah, I’m a nihilist, but only ‘cause I’m tired of shit.” Word to the dead man’s ego.

  • Roy Christopher

Side A

A 01. Key To Life

A 02. Ballad of the Has Been

A 03. Statues Crumble

A 04. Vulture Stones ft. sleepingdogs

A 05. Bad Seeds

A 06. Imposter ft. BATERIA aka Jedi Son of Spock

A 07. Murder by Numbers ft. PremRock & Fatboi Sharif

Side B

B 08. Neromancer

B 09. Göbekli Tepe ft. Curly Castro & John Robinson

B 10. Until We Make the Unconscious Conscious It Will Direct Our Lives and We'll Call It Fate

B 11. Hunnid Dollar Bills

B 12. Mild for the Night

B 13. Disappearing Acts ft. Zilla Rocca and Cryptic One

1B 4. I Don’t Care No More 

B 15. Reverberations Of A Dead Man’s Ego

CREDITS:

All songs written & performed by Alaska * features noted

All scratches by Marcus Pinn

Photography by Mike McAuley

All songs produced, engineered & mixed by steel tipped dove


-

When an emcee finds a producer who fuels his verbals, he keeps him close. Atoms Fam, Hangar 18, and Def Jux alumnus, Alaska found just such a fire in steel tipped dove on last year’s The Structural Dynamics of Flow. A journeyman in the pits, dove’s credits run way below the surface of things, and his pedigree shows in his ability to keep the rig moving no matter. Once again on the black circles is the inimitable Marcus Pinn, steady adding nitrous to the mix. Over numerous releases in the last few years including two from 2023 alone, Alaska has settled into a style as mature as it is versatile. He knows the course comfortably now, so he can take the turns, open it up, and just drive.

Along for the ride this time are PremRock and Curly Castro (a.k.a. ShrapKnel), who with Zilla Rocca, make up three-fourths of the Wrecking Crew. All appear on different tracks here, not that keeping them separated blunts their impact in the least. Prem and The Prophet, Fatboi Sharif, are Alaska’s accomplices on “Murder by Numbers,” and fellow Atoms Family member Cryptic One joins Zilla and Alaska on “Disappearing Acts.” There’s also Bateria, a.k.a Jedi Son of Spock, on “Imposter” and Sleeping Dogs on “Vulture Stones,” among others. Those guys are all undeniably dope, but they’re only passengers here.

Alaska never lets you forget who’s behind the wheel as he drops lyrical references to everything from classic slashers and Wu-Tang to Violent Femmes and Hunter S. Thompson. It’s fun, but it’s serious. You can feel the aging aches of “Mild for the Night” in your lower back. You can also feel the frustration on “Hundred Dollar Bills” when Alaska raps, “Yeah, I’m a nihilist, but only ‘cause I’m tired of shit.” Word to the dead man’s ego.

  • Roy Christopher