Pffr united we doth rar




















Free repair deeds, jewelry and supplies are available in donation chests in the guild house as donated by members. Dye tubs and other crafting stations are also to be provided as amenities in the guild house. Provide a rune library and other modes of travel. Point out or provide low-cost resources. High-value donations are not required, and should not be expected by members. Encourage guild members to share information and assist other members, especially new members, to master skills.

Encourage guild members to assist each other through the use of their crafting talents. Encourage guild members to assist other members in trouble, particularly to recover belongings after a death. There is, however, an expectation that members will refrain from repeated and nuisance requests for assistance. Programs Provide scheduled guild-sponsored hunts under capable leadership. Hunt Leaders determine hunt location, collect keys if needed, and make reasonable efforts to ensure everyone makes it back to the guild house upon hunt completion.

The more the discs spin, the more I gain a respect for Subtle, and Doseone in particular. Their music is so technical, outside the box, emotional, and complex. It's rap, but it's not. Almost like a confused white boy doing solo Bone Thugs-N-Harmony impressions over irregular timestamps - but completely original.

I can tell, the more time I spend researching Dose, that he was a huge hip-hop head, that it was his blood and ligaments. That's exactly how I felt for much of my life. Anyhow, he doesn't even rhyme half the time, but his flow is so incredible I really hope that, like modern day poetry, eventually music goes the way of anti-rhyme. With PFFR perhaps caught somewhere between wanting to record an arty hip-hop album appearing to consist mostly of skits and creating a self-conscious parody of wanting to record such an album, United We Doth seems to be a weird relic for a mindset more than anything else.

Whatever PFFR 's motives and context by the time United We Doth appeared, the overwhelming sense is one of displacement and a failure of connection; if this was an attempt to break to a wider audience musically after their first self-released and import efforts, it didn't quite work.

If this had appeared on Rephlex, Ipecac, or Tigerbeat6 rather than Birdman, maybe it would have found an audience more immediately. For a start, a song like "Total Dicks," with its anti-capitalist sentiments and stop-start arrangements, half glitch and half whatever flavor of '80s revival was happening at the time, certainly seems like it should have Kid all over it. Song titles like "Un Phit Psonique" -- a not-exactly-love duet that dissolves into chaotic noise every so often -- and "Sparse Party" also seem like they could have come from either 's or Aphex Twin 's brain, depending on the mood and the drugs used.

Given the members' work as an art collective, it's entirely possible this is one of those releases that needs the visual as much as the audio in order to work -- not for nothing does the CD release include videos as a bonus.

But exceptions like the queasy squelch stomp "Fanfanfantatatasysysy" aside, United We Doth is something less than it could be in the end. AllMusic relies heavily on JavaScript. Please enable JavaScript in your browser to use the site fully. Blues Classical Country. Electronic Folk International.



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