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As a member of Brand Nubian, Sadat X (born Derek Murphy) was one of the key MCs who related messages inspired by the Five Percent Nation. Two years after Brand Nubian's third album, Everything Is Everything, he made his solo debut with Wild Cowboys, which built on his lyrical reputation on top of tough, jazz-inflected arrangements. The album, featuring production from Diamond D and Buckwild, was a solid solo debut that didn't quite scale the heights of his legacy with Brand Nubian. No Better Way, also released in 1996, improved on the debut and was produced by a cast that opened up to include da Beatminerz and Pete Rock. Sadat teamed back up with Brand Nubian for 1998's Foundation, but he didn't appear again as a solo artist until The State of New York vs. Derek Murphy, an EP released on Relativity in 2000. With a full-time job as a special-education teacher, it took five years before his next album, 2005's Experience & Education, was released, but 2006 saw another full-length, Black October, which was recorded while Sadat X awaited the possibility of prison time for carrying a loaded gun. ~ Andy Kellman, Rovi
See the problem is not enuff headz know real hip hop. Not booty shake, not strip club, none o dat ol got a phat beat with bullshit tunes on top of it. Anyone saying they Better than the founders of the craft that you have come to love called hip hop....ain't true headz...Nuff said....one.
Hip hop for ever!... F*ck rap! This invokes all elements off hip hop. Where's the elements in "rap". Dissing this cat shows how uneducated listeners of the genre have become!
Its sad how some of you catz can try to dis a real MC. His honesty and skillz on the mic is inspiring. He and Brand Nubian is definitely a critical component to the golden era of hip hop.
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