You Better Believe It - Soul Assassins, Joiner, A.
When the Fat Lady Sings - Soul Assassins, Grice, G.
This Some 'N To - Soul Assassins, Barnett, R.
Armageddon (Interlude) - Soul Assassins,
Victory or Defeat - Soul Assassins, Ivey, F.
Heart of the Assassin - Soul Assassins, Austin, J.
Suckers Are Hidin' - Soul Assassins, Maman, A.
When the Pain Inflict - Soul Assassins, Brown, R.
Don't Trip - Soul Assassins, Freese, Louis
Razor to Your Throat - Soul Assassins, Muggerud, Lawrence
Millennium Thrust - Soul Assassins, Abdul-Arhman, K.
After Forming Cypress Hill Together with B Real and Sen Dog Back in 1991, Muggs and Cypress Hill Took the World by Storm with their Edgy Lyrics and Phat Street Beats.
After Forming Cypress Hill Together with B Real and Sen Dog Back in 1991, Muggs and Cypress Hill Took the World by Storm with their Edgy Lyrics and Phat Street Beats.
"This is as hardcore as gangsta rap gets. Muggs' second instalment of the Soul Assassins' Chapters ranks as one of the better gangsta rap albums released in the millennium. The album borders between straight cadillac crusing-blunt smoking-down the hood and a touch of horrorcore. Muggs, as the genius behind Cypress Hill, sets out on his own to lay a solid foundation to his career as one of the most aspiring producers in the history of hip hop. His second attempt to establish the Soul Assassins is a more matured approach. The groundbreaking Soul Assassins Chapter 1 was only a taste of Muggs' talent, which evidently stretches out in Chapter 2. He takes a deeper step into his ocean, of eerie undertones and spooky piano riffs laced with deafening bass thumps - only this time, it sounds like a soundtrack to a psychotic murder motion picture. And of course, assisting him is a cleverly selected group of underrated and gifted emcees from both coasts. The microphone stranglers in this album have styles that coincide with Muggs' mental probing production with pin point accuracy, and this makes the results a marvel to listen to. Kool G. Rap never sounded so good with West Coast beats; Infamous Mobb's G.O.D. spits his best record ever; X'zibit rises to the peak of hardcoreness with King Tee; Ras Kass' guest appearance on a track with underground favourites Chace Infinite, Krondon and Phenam is a surprise - its good to know he's gone back to his old style; Kurupt makes two appearances - firstly to tease us with a head bopping interlude only to later cause massive wreckage with Roscoe - this is probably the tightest collaboration I've heard from the West Coast since the Dogg Pound. Even Everlast drops a short 2 verses across a nodding bassline and still manages to get the point across. The most astounding and inspiring track has to be Dilated Peoples' "Suckers Are Hiding" which is extremely addictive and you'll be rapping along with it in no less than 2 listens. There are also appearances from artists who made the first album: GZA, Goodie Mobb and Cypress Hill. Muggs produces all but 2 tracks which are contributed by his protégé The Alchemist, whose production is similar to that of Muggs (He would later be inducted in the Infamous Mobb Deep, Cypress Hill and Dilated Platoon families). DJ Muggs' creativity is exceptional and this album celebrates the brilliant calibre of his skills. Oh yeah, and make sure to check out the remixed GZA hidden track - it clearly shows how Muggs touches two ends of the world with his music (total seriousness toned to happy head bopping over the same lyrics)."
Soul Assassins
Postman Pat | UK | 12/12/2000
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Soul Assassins 2 is one of the best albums of the year. Each song is impressive with dark beats and ill emcees. The grizant said the production on You Better Believe It isn't good but its an ill beat - something like its off an old gangster film which compliments Xzibit and King Tee's lyrics in the song. Both the Kurupt songs are dope with his raw lyrics. The production from Muggs and the Alchemist is consistent throughout the album.In my opinion, the first two tracks are the worst, Everlast's lyrics aren't up to much but his flow is nice and the Self Scientific is a good song to end with, not counting the bonus tracks. The Cypress Hill song is better than the ones I've heard off their album, its more like one off Temples Of Boom or IV. The most outstanding songs from the album are Gza's When The Fat Lady Sings, Kurupt and Roscoe's When The Pain Inflict, Dilated People's Suckers Are Hidin', and Cypress Hill's Don't Trip."
Don't sleep on this classic.
KevinF | USA | 08/15/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This Cd is classic material. You need to keep this in your 60 disc changer forever. Muggs' Soul AssasinsI is nothing compared to the S.A.II. I recommend this if you like the collaborate style Cd's.I wish Cypress Hills could use the beats off this album to make them sound like they did when they just killed a man.Kool G Rap,Gza,Infamous Mobb,Dialated,with Goodied Mob, c'mon? This is a sleeper. I hope Muggs made some flow from this one, becuase he deserves it. Keep it up Muggs. Job well done. One love to all the hiphop heads that know what this sh@t should sound like. Lil who? Kanye wh@? We know you were listening to Muggs in the 90's. Much respect... Violen strings,fat beats,stares, Dj premier must give props to Muggs.Whens the third of the trio coming out???????? 8-14-04"
An all-star underground CD
bjs1015484744@aol.com Blake Stevens | Sussex, England | 03/31/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"How this album cn be slated I do not know. Muggs has worked with high-profile artists in his time (Dr.Dre, Ice Cube, KRS-One to name a few), but on this installment of the Soul Assassins, he works with less well-known artists.
He wanted to surprise a few people because he could easily have an album filled with artists that are guaranteed to sell but Muggs prefers to keep things closer to the streets.
From Kool G Rap's tremendous opening, this album is brilliant. Admittadly, there are tracks that lack something but when you work with so many different artists, what do you expect?
This album is a marked improvement on the first album and I believe that the stand-out tracks that are Muggs-produced are from GZA, Everlast and Heart of the Assassin. The best track, I think, is the Alchemist produced Dilated Peoples track. The chimed beats are typical of him and the production wrk is phat. The beat for this track is remarkably similar to that of Royce Da 5"9's I'm the King, which of course was produced by Al.
Overall, if you wanna hear a sample of the underground plus a few well-known artists going back to the roots, then get this album..."
DJ Muggs still dope as ever
RiotPelaaja | Finland | 10/14/2000
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Soul Assasins 2 is a great album, a far better effort from DJ Muggs than Cypress Hill's very lacklustre Skull & Bones album. Muggs uses his trusty formula of lowkey piano samples, dark and minimalistic production inspired by Black Sabbath, Doors and others.While he's formula has began to repeat itself on the past few Cypress Hill albums, he's produced some killer tracks on his solo effort. It's not solely his work however as veteran Soul Assasins cliq member Alchemist drops a few bomb tracks, similar to his "Deadly Assasins" cut on Everlast's new album.The quality and flow of the guest rappers is uneven with Kool G Rap, G.O.D pt3 of the Infamous Mob, Everlast, Kurupt & Roscoe along with Dilated Peoples being the dopest emcees..not to mention a standout cut from Xzibit and King-T, latter being one of the most slept on emcees of late.Muggs weaves his dark dank sound well and he only falters in few of the albums 14 cuts, the bad ones sound like they've been left off Skull and Bones. All songs are dark and ominious, this is a very moody album which Soul Assasins do best.Soul Assasins will indeed survive."