Search - Cypress Hill :: Tilld Eath Do Us Part

Tilld Eath Do Us Part
Cypress Hill
Tilld Eath Do Us Part
Genres: Pop, Rap & Hip-Hop, Latin Music
 
  •  Track Listings (16) - Disc #1

Japanese edition of 2004 album features 18 tracks including 2 bonus tracks, 'Ready To Die' & 'Roll It Up Again'. CBS.

     
?

Larger Image

CD Details

All Artists: Cypress Hill
Title: Tilld Eath Do Us Part
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Sony Japan
Original Release Date: 1/1/2004
Re-Release Date: 3/31/2004
Album Type: Extra tracks, Import
Genres: Pop, Rap & Hip-Hop, Latin Music
Styles: Gangsta & Hardcore, West Coast, Pop Rap, Urban, Latin Hip-Hop
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
Other Editions: Till Death Do Us Part, Till Death Do Us Part
UPC: 4547366014587

Synopsis

Album Description
Japanese edition of 2004 album features 18 tracks including 2 bonus tracks, 'Ready To Die' & 'Roll It Up Again'. CBS.
 

CD Reviews

The best for a long time
Mr. R. W. Woodward | UK | 06/11/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I can't believe the 1 and 2 star reviews some people have given this album. I bought Black Sunday when it came out and I've got all their studio albums - so I know my Cypress Hill. This album sees the Hill back on form after what was the disappointment of Stoned Raiders.To all of you that say it's not Black Sunday or Templezs of Boom - come on, who would seriously listen to a group that always made the same album? Do you just want clones? This is evolution, and they still make the competion sound like fake pop amateurs. There's a lot of talk about it being a reggae album but there is a real mix of styles here which works so well. Buy it!!!"
B-Real Still Keepin it real
Educated Fool | MidWestWisconsin | 12/09/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Cypress Hill has yet again released a quality album. Like any truely good CD, this one grows on you, like the Latin Thug we all knew from the past. His beats are full of a good mix of Latino rhythms and gives off a sense of reggae in select songs. I find it problematic that Cypress Hill fans give this album a bad rating. This album is full of the same intellectual side that B Real has always always presented. The man is too smart for some people to understand. I guess pop-rap is what people like these days. Besides, you can't call this old school when it was released in 2004, it is a newly improved version of the early roots of hip hop we all grew up on. It disappoints me because you rarely hear this in bars or clubs. B Real is a modern day marvel, and can only be understood if you've personally experienced a true life of trouble, and then moved on to better things(ex rap artist). You need to understand the man B Real, and not a fake front as the other hip hop artists give off to draw in the 'want to be thugs.' Stay Real."
Good lyrics, bad music
David R. Tisdale, II | Haughton, LA United States | 04/01/2006
(3 out of 5 stars)

"I've been listening to Cypress Hill since Black Sunday, so my review will be in the context of a pretty solid Cypress Hill fan.



Firstly, as many of the other reviewers have stated, the beats on most of the songs leave a bit to be desired. The production values are good; the music is very clear, except for parts that are intentionally not supposed to be (samples from vinyl, for instance). However, the beats just aren't that memorable. "Another Body Drops," "Street Wars," and "What's Your Name?" are really the only songs that you'll listen to over and over again.



On the other hand, the lyrics are outstanding. B-Real's flow has just gotten better by the album. I have all of Cypress Hill's albums on my MP3 player, and while I'm at work I'll listen to them in release date order, and you can really see how B-Real has improved his skills as a lyricist over time. His rhymes keep getting tighter and tighter, and I really believe that he's a fairly under-appreciated rapper. Let me state, however, that as someone else here said, the hooks suck. You can tell that they couldn't figure out a catchy hook, so they just repeated the name of the song (see the song "Dollar Bill"). This is a probem that started on Skull and Bones, and I think it's just going to continue.



I personally believe that III: Temples of Boom was the Hill's greatest album. It was so dark and moody, and Mugg's beats were almost dank and dungeon-like. Everything before III was Cypress Hill trying to find their identity, and everything after was them moving a little more towards the mainstream rap circle. I'm not saying they sold out, it's just that their music has become a little more of what one would expect from a rap group. If you don't have III: Temples of Boom, you need to buy it. It's one of my favorite albums of all time. Till Death Do Us Part, however, is a more mundane and forgettable chapter in Cypress Hill's history."