| Rating |
Summary |
|
| n/a by Billboard |
For his second solo studio record, the Quannum Projects godfather veers left from his sample-centric background and into something that should be highly pleasing to anyone who enjoyed hip-hop in 1988. |
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| n/a by www.pastemagazine.com |
The album truly is everywhere at once, and for that it at least deserves a taste. |
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| n/a by www.nowtoronto.com |
He?s still expanding his vocal range, but this hour of soulful, sugary funk will accompany your summer parties quite well. |
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| n/a by Pitchfork Media |
But with only two weak tracks and some deletable skits outweighed by a dozen good-to-great cuts, Everywhere at Once is one of the best albums to come from a Solesides alumnus in a long time. |
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| n/a by www.avclub.com |
Like any party, it loses steam toward the end, but it's worth attending for at least a while. |
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| n/a by www.austinchronicle.com |
Truly hyph-lite, LP four, Everywhere at Once, drops more fizzle than pop over a rote canvas of 1980s B-boy stance and 'Hott 2 Deff' breaks. |
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| n/a by www.lostatsea.net |
So here we are, with the record Shimura smartly did not title Same Shit, Five Years Later?, because that would've made it slightly easier to tell he's stuck in his own brain. |
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| n/a by www.dustedmagazine.com |
There are many moments here when the good times roll effectively enough, but rarely as well as past Born efforts. |
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