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• ' Released: May 2, 1997 • ' Released: October 7, 1997 Professional ratings Review scores Source Rating B The Art of War is the third studio album by group which was released on July 29, 1997. The album sold 394,000 units in its first week of release. The album was certified quadruple Platinum by the in June 1998.
It was the first double-album from Bone Thugs-n-Harmony. The album included the platinum-single ', and the gold-single '. The whole album is produced. A to the album was released on December 10, 2013. Contents • • • • • • • • • • • • Background [ ] The album was rumored to be called 'DNA Level C' which is Cleveland backwards.
'The Art of War' was created largely as a response to rappers deemed 'Clones' (copycats) by the group. Such rappers included,, &, Bone Killas, &. In the wake of his father's death and Tomica Wright now heading, was not happy, and thus did not appear for many shows or promotions. Now calling the shots, many tracks were altered by Tomica Wright, attempting to head the group into a new direction. Such tracks include Thug Luv with, If I Could Teach the World, Friends, Ready For War and many others. While the group appeared at Sprite Nite on BET, Keenan Ivory Wayans (with Bizzy), and several other promotions, their tour began to lag without Bizzy. Music and lyrics [ ] In 'Ready 4 War,' Bone Thugs-n-Harmony (along with Mr.
Majesty) called out Crucial Conflict directly by name, with Majesty even stating, 'I'll watch you ride the rodeo straight to the bottom'. In 'U Ain't Bone', Layzie Bone raps a line similar to the chorus from female rap icon 's '10% dis'. MC Lyte's chorus raps 'Beat biter! Dope style taker!
Tell it to your face, you ain't nuttin but a faker!' , while Layzie Bone's verse interpolates 'They beat biters, dope-style takers. When I see you face-to-face, my nigga, I'm-a treat you like a hater.' In 2000, MC Lyte stated that she was 'extremely' disrespected by Layzie Bone, and 's lyrical interpolations of her '10% Dis' lines.
Layzie interpolated the chorus on 'U Ain't Bone', while Kim and Brown interpolated the beginning verse, 'Hot damn, ho, here we go again!' On 's ' (Remix) and 's 'Bang-Bang', respectively.
This resulted in MC Lyte calling out all of the three rappers on the -collaborated, 'Where U At Mama?' They also changed the name of 'Friends' for the cassette version to 'How Many of Us Have Them'.
Wrote his verse for 'Thug Luv' in 1 minute and 51 seconds as confirmed by Bizzy Bone. Singles [ ] The first single for this album was, which was also on the soundtrack. Neither Bizzy nor Flesh-n-Bone was featured in the video. The next single was 'If I Could Teach the World'. Bizzy did not appear in this video either. 'Thug Luv' and 'Body Rott' were also released to radio as singles.
Critical reception [ ] The Art of War received mostly positive reviews from music critics, with some critics calling the album sonically superior to its predecessor, E. 1999 Eternal. While others criticizing the album for its length, including extended disses towards other rappers, leading to repetitive song play. Stephen Thomas Erlewine of Allmusic said, 'While the group is capable of producing a catchy single, they don't have the personality to sustain an album, much less a double-disc set. By the end of the second disc, they have repeated all of their ideas at least five times apiece, and only a few of those ideas resulted in actual songs in the first place.' Considine of Entertainment Weekly gave the album a 'B' rating, stating, 'Lest the smooth sound of 'Look Into My Eyes' leaves you thinking the Bone Thugs-N-Harmony are really just pop-friendly softies, this 28-song double disc, The Art of War, offsets its slow-and-sweet numbers with bloodthirsty workouts like the shotgun-spiked 'Thug Luv'. But after two hours of these singsong melodies, War seems more like a siege than a surgical strike.'