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8.2
22988
8.2 |
Beats Per Minute
This is the most a Wu record has reclaimed their original sound since perhaps the first slew of Wu solo offerings
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8.0
23508
8.0 |
Consequence Of Sound
His determination to make a Wu-Tang album without all the pieces that make a Wu-Tang record comes to fruition here
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8.0
24168
8.0 |
No Ripcord
Another monument to the effortless style and cool of Rae
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7.9
23404
7.9 |
Pitchfork
Few rappers could bring such an engaging sense of energy to a project so focused on preaching to the converted
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7.0
23344
7.0 |
Drowned In Sound
It’s been nearly two decades at the top for this seminal hip hop group, and on this evidence they show no signs of losing their edge
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7.0
23385
7.0 |
Tiny Mix Tapes
Shaolin vs. Wu-Tang is certainly not a perfect album — the good-to-great tracks are recorded way too cleanly, and there are some really awful bits
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7.0
22986
7.0 |
Slant Magazine
By attempting to break free from his group's guru, Raekwon inevitably only proves how vital RZA has been to nearly everything its members have produced
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7.0
24413
7.0 |
BBC
This goes down as very good rather than another outstanding offering
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7.0
24425
7.0 |
AU Review
Almost every one of the 17 tracks here comes in around the three-minute mark or so, giving it more of a mixtape feel
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7.0
23780
7.0 |
Rolling Stone
It sounds like no one else because it sounds so stubbornly like 1995 — still behind the times, and still ahead of the competition
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7.0
23795
7.0 |
PopMatters
Entertaining and another worthy addition to Wu-Tang’s ever-strengthening third or fourth wind
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6.5
23487
6.5 |
Prefix
Obviously saving his energy for the third installment of the Cuban Linx series
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6.0
23250
6.0 |
Clash
Patchy with flashes of killer bee sting
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2.0
22987
2.0 |
NME
That’ll show ’em!
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