Rza As Bobby Digital Digi Snacks Zip
- The sound of the production on Digi Snacks lies somewhere between RZA’s previous Bobby Digital work and 8 Diagrams. He finds a happy balance between dark and upbeat and keeps the complexities of.
- 12 - Bobby Did It - Spanish Fly. 13 - Handwriting On The Wall. 14 - Kiss Of A Black Widow. 15 - Slow Grind Italian. 16 - My Lovin Is Digi. Rza As Bobby Digital - Digi Snacks - 2008. Tracklist: 01 - Digi Snacks Intro. 02 - Long Time Coming. 03 - You Can't Stop Me Now. 04 - Straight Up The Block. 05 - Booby Trap.

In the past Rza has used his Bobby Digital persona as an outlet for his more experimental impulses. The first two Bobby Digital albums were unrepentantly unorthodox, defiantly dissonant exercises in near avant-garde Hip-Hop productions and cryptic rhymes, based in Rza’s obscure but often compelling personal cosmology. Digi Snacks, represents a significant about face and is easily his most accessible solo album. HereRza trades the moodily abstract soundscapes of Wu-Tang’s The 8 Diagrams for rough-hewn old school funk reminiscent of his recent soundtrack work for Quentin Tarantino. The autobiographical “You Can’t Stop Me Now” yokes the boxy rhythm’s of the Whatnaut’s take on the Temptations’ “Message From a Blackman” with an ominous keyboard line, all to truly impressive effect, while the abstract keyboard noodling and ghostly vocal loops of “Money Don’t Own Me” recall the more adventurous moments of Rza’s earlier Bobby Digital efforts.

His trademark lo-fi atmospherics are evident throughout and provide just the right amount of vintage Wu-Tang grit. In the past Rza has used his Bobby Digital persona as an outlet for his more experimental impulses. The first two Bobby Digital albums were unrepentantly unorthodox, defiantly dissonant exercises in near avant-garde Hip-Hop productions and cryptic rhymes, based in Rza’s obscure but often compelling personal cosmology. Digi Snacks, represents a significant about face and is easily his most accessible solo album. HereRza trades the moodily abstract soundscapes of Wu-Tang’s The 8 Diagrams for rough-hewn old school funk reminiscent of his recent soundtrack work for Quentin Tarantino. The autobiographical “You Can’t Stop Me Now” yokes the boxy rhythm’s of the Whatnaut’s take on the Temptations’ “Message From a Blackman” with an ominous keyboard line, all to truly impressive effect, while the abstract keyboard noodling and ghostly vocal loops of “Money Don’t Own Me” recall the more adventurous moments of Rza’s earlier Bobby Digital efforts.
Bjork - Bachelorette (RZA Remix) Bounty Killer - Eyes A Bleed (RZA Remix) Bounty Killer - War Face (Ask Fi War) (Remix) Charles Mingus - II B.S. (Rza's Mingus Bounce Mix) Charlie Parker - Bebop (Live At The Rooftop) (RZA Remix) Cilvaringz - Man, Woman And Child (RZA Remix) Dark Skinned Assassin - The Horror (Unreleased RZA Remix).
His trademark lo-fi atmospherics are evident throughout and provide just the right amount of vintage Wu-Tang grit.
About RZAThe mad genius behind one of the most important crews in the history of hip-hop, RZA has rewritten the rules for making beats. Following a brief stint as Prince Rakeem in 1991, he came back with a vengeance, masterminding the Wu's classic debut Enter The Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) in 1993. The rest is history.
The Clan blew up, spawning clothing lines, movies, comic books, video games and seemingly unlimited numbers of solo albums, but it was the Rzarector's trademark sound that made it all possible. In addition to his work on Wu records, both group and solo, he has managed to stay quite busy.
He was a founding member of Gravediggaz and he has begun working in film, both as a director and a composer. In 1998 he recorded his futuristic concept album RZA as Bobby Digital in Stereo. The sophisticated pseudo-soundtrack went over the heads of many Clan fans, but displayed his need for experimentation and growth as an artist. The RZA would release three more solo projects over the next decade, two additional Bobby Digital projects (2001's Digital Bullet and 2008's Digi Snax) as well as 2004's Birth of a Prince.Brolin Winning. The mad genius behind one of the most important crews in the history of hip-hop, RZA has rewritten the rules for making beats. Following a brief stint as Prince Rakeem in 1991, he came back with a vengeance, masterminding the Wu's classic debut Enter The Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) in 1993. The rest is history.

The Clan blew up, spawning clothing lines, movies, comic books, video games and seemingly unlimited numbers of solo albums, but it was the Rzarector's trademark sound that made it all possible. In addition to his work on Wu records, both group and solo, he has managed to stay quite busy. He was a founding member of Gravediggaz and he has begun working in film, both as a director and a composer. In 1998 he recorded his futuristic concept album RZA as Bobby Digital in Stereo.
The sophisticated pseudo-soundtrack went over the heads of many Clan fans, but displayed his need for experimentation and growth as an artist. The RZA would release three more solo projects over the next decade, two additional Bobby Digital projects (2001's Digital Bullet and 2008's Digi Snax) as well as 2004's Birth of a Prince.
The mad genius behind one of the most important crews in the history of hip-hop, RZA has rewritten the rules for making beats. Following a brief stint as Prince Rakeem in 1991, he came back with a vengeance, masterminding the Wu's classic debut Enter The Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) in 1993. The rest is history. The Clan blew up, spawning clothing lines, movies, comic books, video games and seemingly unlimited numbers of solo albums, but it was the Rzarector's trademark sound that made it all possible. In addition to his work on Wu records, both group and solo, he has managed to stay quite busy. He was a founding member of Gravediggaz and he has begun working in film, both as a director and a composer. In 1998 he recorded his futuristic concept album RZA as Bobby Digital in Stereo.
The sophisticated pseudo-soundtrack went over the heads of many Clan fans, but displayed his need for experimentation and growth as an artist. The RZA would release three more solo projects over the next decade, two additional Bobby Digital projects (2001's Digital Bullet and 2008's Digi Snax) as well as 2004's Birth of a Prince.
About RZAThe mad genius behind one of the most important crews in the history of hip-hop, RZA has rewritten the rules for making beats. Following a brief stint as Prince Rakeem in 1991, he came back with a vengeance, masterminding the Wu's classic debut Enter The Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) in 1993. The rest is history.
The Clan blew up, spawning clothing lines, movies, comic books, video games and seemingly unlimited numbers of solo albums, but it was the Rzarector's trademark sound that made it all possible. In addition to his work on Wu records, both group and solo, he has managed to stay quite busy.
He was a founding member of Gravediggaz and he has begun working in film, both as a director and a composer. In 1998 he recorded his futuristic concept album RZA as Bobby Digital in Stereo.
Rza Bobby Digital Album
The sophisticated pseudo-soundtrack went over the heads of many Clan fans, but displayed his need for experimentation and growth as an artist. The RZA would release three more solo projects over the next decade, two additional Bobby Digital projects (2001's Digital Bullet and 2008's Digi Snax) as well as 2004's Birth of a Prince.Brolin Winning.