Take Me to Your Leader

Take Me to Your Leader

King Geedorah
Year 2003
Genre Hip Hop|Abstract Hip Hop
Hip Hop Abstract Hip Hop

Tracklist 13 tracks

#
Title
Rating
Plays
1.
Fazers
★ 3
-
2.
Fastlane
★ 3
-
3.
Krazy World
★ 3
-
4.
The Final Hour
2
-
5.
Monster Zero
2
-
6.
Next Levels
★ 3
-
7.
No Snakes Alive
2
-
8.
Anti-Matter
★ 3
-
9.
Take Me To Your Leader
2
-
10.
Lockjaw
2
-
11.
I Wonder
★ 3
-
12.
One Smart Nigger
2
-
13.
The Fine Print
★ 3
-

📖 About this album

YOUR PLAYS
22 scrobbles
TOTAL PLAYS
22199360 scrobbles
LISTENERS
1005493
Take Me to Your Leader is the second studio album by British-American rapper MF DOOM, released under the alias King Geedorah via Big Dada on June 17, 2003. King Geedorah is the alias DOOM used as part of the underground super group Monsta Island Czars. The album features guest appearances from MF Grimm (as Jet Jaguar) as well as other MIC members. The character is based on the three-headed King Ghidorah, a fictional monster who appears as Godzilla's enemy in the Godzilla films. Mark Martelli of Pitchfork wrote that Take Me to Your Leader "will excite you in a way Read more on Last.fm.
Read more
Take Me to Your Leader is the second studio album by British-American rapper MF DOOM, released under the alias King Geedorah via Big Dada on June 17, 2003. King Geedorah is the alias DOOM used as part of the underground super group Monsta Island Czars. The album features guest appearances from MF Grimm (as Jet Jaguar) as well as other MIC members. The character is based on the three-headed King Ghidorah, a fictional monster who appears as Godzilla's enemy in the Godzilla films. Mark Martelli of Pitchfork wrote that Take Me to Your Leader "will excite you in a way most hip-hop projects just aren't able: It's not straining for credibility nor putting effort into being revelatory; it just is." Noel Dix of Exclaim! remarked that the album "plays like a cinematic space adventure that you never want to end". In 2009, Rhapsody ranked Take Me to Your Leader 17th on its list "Hip-Hop's Best Albums of the Decade". In 2012, Stereogum named it the third best MF DOOM album. In 2014, it was listed by Complex as one of the "Best One-Producer Albums of the 2000s". Retrospectively, Jacob Adams of Spectrum Culture wrote, "It's perhaps one of the weirdest rap albums of the past decade, yet one of the most endlessly fascinating. It deserves a second listen." Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
hip-hop jazz hop underground hip-hop mf doom hip hop