other titles...

Nas

I AM… (Black Friday 2023)

Limited 2LP in Deluxe Gatefold Sleeve - £31.99 | Buy
"I Am, The Autobiography", the long sought-after bootleg released commercially for the first time.
Nas

IT WAS WRITTEN (national album day 2023)

limited gold & black marbled 2lp - £35.99 | Buy
'It Was Written' is the second studio album by American rapper Nas, originally released on July 2, 1996, by Columbia Records.
Nas

It Was Written (2022 repress)

2lp - £32.99 | Buy
in contrast to the urban bleakness of his debut, 'it was written' had Nas dipping his toes into the world of mafioso rap.
Nas

Illmatic (2022 reissue)

LP - £28.99 | Buy
In 1994, hip-hop was going through an at-times painful growth spurt.
Nas

Magic

CD - £12.99 | Buy
Produced by Nas’ longtime collaborator Hit-Boy, Nas shares Magic, the transcendent 9 track album including “Wave Gods” ft A$AP Rocky and DJ Pr...
Nas

King’s Disease

cd - £11.99 | Buy
King’s Disease sets the stage for a reimagined future while paying homage to legacy, highlighting the prowess of the King’s experience.
Stillmatic (2023 Reissue)
  1. Stillmatic (The Intro)
  2. Ether
  3. Got Ur Self A…
  4. Smokin'
  5. You're Da Man
  6. Rewind
  7. One Mic
  8. 2nd Childhood
  9. Destroy & Rebuild
  10. The Flyest (feat. AZ)
  11. Braveheart Party (feat. Mary J. Blige & Bravehearts)
  12. Rule (feat. Amerie)
  13. My Country (feat. Millenium Thug)
  14. What Goes Around (feat. Keon Bryce)
  15. Every Ghetto (feat. Blitz)

Nas

Stillmatic (2023 Reissue)

get on down
  • Limited Silver 2LP

    Released: 27th Oct 2023

    £31.99
    Buy

Few hip-hop artists have achieved the same level of critical acclaim and praise that 90s veteran and Queens native Nasir "Nas" Jones has.

Across his over 25-year career he has been ranked as one of the greatest rap performers and lyricists by MTV, The Source, and Complex, among other publications, all while selling over 30 million records worldwide, and releasing eight consecutive platinum albums. In particular, his 1994 debut Illmatic is hailed as a paragon of underground hip-hop, a turning point in East Coast rap's development, and one of the all-time greatest debut albums in general. Though Nas' artistic legacy is without question, it was not always the case; if Nas had flourished during the mid-90s, he had stumbled clumsily while transitioning into the 00's. After achieving universal praise via Illmatic and commercial success with its' follow-up It Was Written, Nas' next few releases were considered inconsistent and lackluster compared to the critical one-two punch they followed. During this time period he had abandoned the socially-conscious and philosophical topics that made him a critical darling in favor of more commercially viable gangsta rap. Though he maintained a chart presence for much of the late-90s, review scores began to dwindle, and his status among the hip-hop community was thrown into question. This would change in 2001 with the release of Nas' fifth studio full-length, which made the effort to re-establish him as a legitimate artist. Eschewing the pop-friendliness he'd found success with, Nas instead opted to return to the underground style he came up in, with tracks about American politics, ghetto life, and social upheaval. Perhaps sensing this need to return to his roots, he titled the album Stillmatic, a clear and present reference (and sequel of sorts) to Illmatic. The ploy worked perfectly; Stillmatic was hailed by critics as a stunning comeback, and a brilliant return to form, earning rave reviews from rap outlets such as The Source and HipHopDX as well as from more mainstream publications as The Rolling Stone and The Village Voice. Praise was heaped upon the complexity and introspective nature of Nas' lyrical content, the top-tier production from veterans like Large Professor, DJ Premier, L.E.S., and Trackmasters, and hard-hitting guest appearances from AZ, Mary J. Blige, and Amerie. Stillmatic would see release on December 18th of 2001, right as Nas was caught in the middle of a highly publicized feud with fellow New York rapper Jay-Z. As such, the record features one of the feud's most intense apexes in the form of its second track "Ether", a ruthless Ron Browz-produced diss track. A response to Jay-Z's own diss "Takeover", "Ether" savaged the Brooklyn-native, accusing him of brown-nosing to get ahead, of plagiarizing earlier rappers such as Notorious B.I.G. and KRS-One, and dismissing his street cred. To this day "Ether" is considered one of the best and most potent diss tracks ever recorded, a major turning point in the Nas/Jay-Z feud, a standout among the already critically acclaimed Stillmatic, and is even credited with boosting Jay-Z's career by proxy.