Dirty Sanchez 47 & Nef Elicit A Balance w/ "Divine Time"

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It sounds crazy to say now but I grew up on Pro Era. Anyone cut from that cloth is unbelievably moving into the arena of being an OG, if they aren't already one. Pro Era left a blueprint as a collective and now as solo acts they continue to do so. No one moves with more bloc than Dirty Sanchez 47 who continues stitching his blueprint right up to the release of his project "Divine Time" produced by Nef.

This is the first body of work from Dirty that feels like New York away from New York. A great chunk of the music holds Rick Ross "Santorini Greece" energy, songs and lyrical content coming from a place of vacation and reflection to look at what has been accomplished. The 80's influenced "M.O.B." (feat. Rokamouth) flips the expectations of a Sanchez 47 song on its head -- hurried flows and elasticated drum machine drums feed these poor man "Can We Talk" chord progressions, making for a merry-toned track that should come with a tasty spread and an outstanding wine or champagne selection. The title song serves up some of the most crisp rapping from the "New Yuck City" artist. His 47 inheritance guides his centered flow of metaphorical rhyming, as Capital STEEZ (with a vocal sample) powers the direction of "Divine Time."

"Divine Time" opens the chest to what makes Dirty Sanchez 47 who he is. The opening song "Lotus" appears from his roots. All the pride in that record is in the warm trumpet sections and tangy acoustic riffs. "All Said and Done" (w/Pomer) sounds like realized power between Black and Brown people but also lives as the smoothest song on the project. This body of work is knowledge from experience being shared -- easily another addition to the blueprint we can openly adopt.

Listen to "Divine Time" in full below.

Lead Photo Cred: spotify.com


    

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