360 Degrees Of Power - Sister Souljah. Лента с персональными рекомендациями и музыкальными новинками, радио, подборки на любой вкус, удобное управление своей. 360 Degrees of Power is the only album by female emcee, author, and activist Sister Souljah, which was released in 1992 on EpicSME Records. The album was met with criticism, not only for its performances-most of which were angry spoken-word tirades that Souljah screamed rather than traditional hip-hop rhymes-but also because of its controversial lyrics. The two singles and music videos, The Hate that Hate Produced and The Final Solution: Slavery's Back in Effect, were banned by MTV because of. 360 Degrees of Power. Sister Souljah. SME от лица компании Epic CMRRA и другие авторские общества 2. souljah reggae indonesia SOULJAH FULL ALBUM THE BEST Of SOULJAH - Продолжительность: 1:16:50 Tua Muda Recommended for you. Pop 1992. in album Sister Souljah - 360 Degrees Of Power 1992. Sister Souljah - African Scaredy Katz In A One Exit Maze. Sister Souljah - 360 Degrees Of Power. Sister Souljah - The Hate That Hate Produced. Sister Souljah - State Of Accomodation: Why Aren't You Angry. Sister Souljah - Nigga's Gotta. Sister Souljah - Wild Buck Beer. Candidate Bill Clinton garnered some cheap positive publicity when he attacked Sister Souljah for allegedly encouraging African-Americans to blindly strike against whites. If he had actually heard the CD, he would have known that Sister Souljah's raps and rhymes were so unappealing and delivered so flatly that few hip-hoppers, let alone any adults, would be paying much attention after the first few minutes. Listen free to Sister Souljah 360 Degrees of Power African Scaredy Katz In A One-Exit Maze, 360 Degrees Of Power and more. 13 tracks 46:06. Sister Souljah born as Lisa Williamson in 1964, Bronx, New York is an American hip hop-generation author, activist, recording artist, and film producer. She is best known for Bill Clinton's criticism of her remarks about race in the United States during the 1992 presidential campaign. The album was met with heavy criticism, not only for its performances-most of which were angry spoken-word tirades that Souljah screamed rather than traditional hip-hop rhymes-but also because of its controversial lyrics. The two singles and music videos, The Hate that Hate Produced and The Final Solution: Slaverys Back in Effect, were banned by MTV because of their inflammatory language and imagery. The album made it to 72 on the Top R&BHip-Hop album chart, selling a mere 27,000 cop