As Bobby DigitalReleasedAugust 28, 2001Recorded2000-2001Length71: 14In the Paint,chronology(1999)Digital Bullet(2001)(2003)Professional ratingsReview scoresSourceRating(favorable)BRapReviewsB−Digital Bullet is the second solo by artist under his pseudonym Bobby Digital. The album was released on August 28, 2001. As a sequel to (1998), the album focuses on an attempt to develop Bobby Digital further, and follows a loose story arc that focused on the character becoming more enlightened and more disillusioned with as the album progresses. The limited-edition version sold at outlets featured two bonus tracks, which were also on the Japanese version of the album released by JVC Records.Track listing No.TitleProducer(s)Length1.'
Show You Love'3:592.' Can't Lose' (featuring )RZA1:463.' Glocko Pop' (featuring, & )RZA4:534.' Must Be Bobby'RZA3:285.'
Brooklyn Babies' (featuring & Masta Killa)RZA3:516.' Domestic Violence Pt. 2' (featuring )3:387.'
Do U' (featuring & )RZA4:038.' Fools' (featuring Killa Sin & Solomon Childs)RZA3:189.' La Rhumba' (featuring Method Man, Killa Sin & Beretta 9)4:2110.' Black Widow Pt. 2' (featuring )RZA2:5411.' Shady' (featuring Intrigue & Beretta 9)RZA4:0912.' Break Bread' (featuring )RZA3:1213.'
Bong Bong' (featuring Beretta 9 & Madame Cez)RZA4:1114.' Throw Your Flag Up' (featuring & )RZA5:1915.' Be A Man'RZA3:2316.' Righteous Way' (featuring )RZA5:2217.' Build Strong' (featuring )RZA4:3418.' Odyssey' (featuring )RZA20.'
Cousins' (featuring & )Mathematics3:24Charts Chart (2001)PeakpositionUS24US 9References. Dan LeRoy (2001-08-28). Retrieved 2015-09-13. Archived from on October 19, 2007. Retrieved 2015-09-13. Serpick, Evan (2001-09-07).
Retrieved 2015-09-13. Nme.Com (2005-09-12). Retrieved 2015-09-13. Retrieved 2015-09-13. Retrieved 2015-09-13.
Archived from on September 10, 2003. Retrieved 2015-09-13. Retrieved October 23, 2014.
Retrieved October 23, 2014.
Is second album under his latest alias, as. It's no shock that he brought back; the first outing, Bobby Digital in Stereo, was a high mark in the producer's prolific career. What is a bit surprising is the sound of this effort, which frequently stretches all the way back to the mystical murk of first album,. The muffled beats and disorienting, late-night soundscapes of that hip-hop classic have been imitated countless times since its 1993 release, but nobody does 'em like, and uneasy tracks like 'Must Be Bobby' and 'Domestic Violence Pt.
2' seem to bring him full circle - as does the presence of several members, including the jailed. Even the nods to the mainstream - 'Glocko Pop' and the swaying single 'La Rhumba' - seem, like 's best work, to have arrived from a slightly different dimension. Meanwhile, there is a storyline to this installment of the story, but as on In Stereo, listeners have to use some imagination to fill it out; 's rhymes are often as evocative and opaque as the kung-fu flicks he loves. But as always, he creates tracks that are more about atmosphere than message - and when he's on his game, as he is here, it's hard to argue with that approach.