Home | Shipping & Return Policies | Shopping Cart | Checkout

Georgia Music Hall of Fame Music Store GEORGIA MUSIC STORE
 
rock jazz r&b rap country blues electronica classical more…
shop
partner retailers look for these logos to order georgia music from our partner retailers
look for these logos to order georgia music from our partner retailers

From tha Roota to tha Toota [Clean]
Field Mob

 Released October 22, 2002

Some music critics have observed that if rap is "the CNN of the streets" (to borrow a phrase coined by Public Enemy leader Chuck D), while country is "the CNN of the suburbs." Historically, hip-hoppers have tended to address urban/inner-city concerns, whereas country singers have often focused on things that people in suburbia and small towns can relate to. But here's the thing: plenty of people in large cities listen to Patty Loveless and Randy Travis, and plenty of hip-hop heads live in small and medium-sized towns. So it was inevitable that a southern rap group like Albany GA's Field Mob would end up bringing a more rural perspective to hip-hop -- well, rural up to a point. Field Mob's Boondox has described Albany as being "like a metropolitan area, but it's rural at the same time" -- and that rural/metropolitan blend makes for many interesting moments on the duo's second album, From tha Roota to tha Toota. Hip-hop heads from the Boogie Down Bronx or West Philadelphia will no doubt find this CD to be extremely southern-sounding, which is a good thing because southern-sounding is exactly what Field Mob is going for. At the same time, Boondox and his partner, Kalage, rap about many of the same social problems that northern MCs rap about -- poverty, drugs, and incarceration are among the topics that they address. But even though the subject matter isn't radically different from what you might hear on a northern (or West Coast) rap project, Field Mob's beats and flows give their work a certain freshness. Field Mob's beats never sound generic, and the southerners don't go out of their way to emulate popular MCs from other parts of Georgia. All things considered, From tha Roota to tha Toota is among the more memorable Dirty South efforts of 2002. [This edition is the clean version.] ~ Alex Henderson, All Music Guide

TRACKS

1. K.A.N. (Kuntry A** N******)
2. Nothing 2 Lose
3. Don't Want No Problems
4. Sick of Being Lonely
5. Where R U Going?
6. It's H***
7. Haters
8. Hi It for Free
9. Betty Rocker
10. Cut Loose
11. All I Know
12. Sick of Being Lonely [Dirty South Mix]


:: Back to Field Mob

:: View more Georgia rap artists.

 

Main Releases

Light Poles and Pine Trees (explicit) (2006)

From tha Roota to tha Toota (explicit) (2002)

613: Ashy to Classy (enhanced CD-ROM) (explicit) (2000)

Singles

Baby Bend Over [Single] (2006)

So What (2006)

So What/Wheels (2006)

Friday Night/My Wheels (2005)

All I Know/Sick of Being Lonely/Cut Loose (2003)

Sick of Being Lonely (explicit) (2002)

Project Dreamz [Single] (2000)

Project Roots [Single] (1999)

All Music Guide© 2006 All Music Guide, LLC
Content provided by All Music Guide®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC