Heroes for Sale | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | April 16, 2013 | |||
Genre | Christian hip hop, progressive hip hop | |||
Length | 60:05 | |||
Label | Reach | |||
Producer | 808&Elite, Alex Medina, Andy Mineo, Chris Morgan, D-Flow (The Brassman), Dirty Rice, Gawvi, GROC, Heat Academy, Jeremey S. H. Griffith, Joseph Prielozny, J.R., Skrip, ThaInnaCircle, TheBridge, Tyshane | |||
Andy Mineo chronology | ||||
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Singles from Heroes for Sale | ||||
Heroes for Sale is the debut studio album by American Christian hip hop artist Andy Mineo, released on April 16, 2013. It follows up Mineo's 2011 mixtape Formerly Known . Considered one of the most anticipated Christian hip hop albums of 2013, Heroes for Sale includes features from Lecrae, Trip Lee, KB, Christon Gray, Krizz Kaliko, and for KING & COUNTRY among others. Three singles were released for the album, "AYO!" on January 28, 2013, "Bitter" on March 5, 2013, and "You Will" on April 2, 2013. A music video for "AYO!" came out on January 31, a three-part webseries was launched on February 6, and a documentary entitled "Everything Must Go" was released on April 9. Lyrically, Mineo based the album concept around the brokenness of human heroes, and the album has a very transparent and personal tone. Stylistically, it mixes electronic-influenced hip hop music with a variety of other genres, including hymns, reggaeton, jazz, R&B, heavy metal, classical, dubstep, second line, acid jazz, psychedelic funk, and jack swing. The album debuted at No. 11 on the Billboard 200, No. 4 on Top Rap Albums chart, No. 1 on the US Top Christian Albums and No. 2 on the UK Top Christianhart.
Mineo announced the album cover and release date, April 16, 2013, as well as releasing a short promo with footage from the photo-shoot, on January 8, 2013 [4] [5] On January 28, 2013, Mineo released the lead single, "AYO!", and a music video followed three days later. [1] [6] On February 6, 2013, Reach Records released the first episode of a three-part short promotional webseries "Heroes For Sale", starring Andy Mineo. [7] The second episode followed on February 20. [8] On March fifth, he dropped the single "Bitter", a re-working of the original version that Mineo released in 2010 under his former stage name C-Lite. [9] Reach Records released another promotional film, this time a live recording of a spontaneous dance party initiated by Mineo on a subway to the song "Uno Uno Seis" from Heroes for Sale, on March 20. [10] The final episode of the "Heroes for Sale" webseries came out on March 29, and a third single from the album dropped on April 2. [11] [12] On April 9, Reach Records released a documentary, entitled "Everything Must Go", about Mineo's experiences of recording his album while touring with 116 Clique on the Unashamed 2012: Come Alive tour. [13]
Andy Mineo stated that the concept behind the album is that "we make heroes out of a lot of things. We make heroes out of people. We believe ourselves to be greater than we really are. We make ourselves look like heroes to other people. What I really wanted to do is show the brokenness of the heroes that we create and the heroes that we try to be in order to show that there is ultimately only one great hero." [14] Andrea Williams of Breathcast called the album "an autobiographical work that reveals an in-depth look into the heart and soul of a true Christ-lover who has faced the challenges of a fallen world head-on." [15] Mark Rice of Jesus Freak Hideout stated that Mineo's rapping delivers "transparent, witty, and at times confrontational lyrics thematically centered around making sinful humans your heroes." [16] Nyon Smith of Rapzilla said that the hymn "Come, Ye Sinners, Poor and Needy" in the first track "Superhuman" sets the stage "for an extremely personable album, blended seamlessly with a distorted guitar that lends to the idea of evangelism even in the darkest of places." [17] The songs "Bitter" and "Shallow" continue this transparency, with the former featuring a thirty-second sample of a voice mail from Mineo's estranged father. [17] "Wild Things" deals with the sacred-secular divide and addresses Christian maturity a topic very rarely touched in Christian hip hop, according to Nyon. [17] Nyon called the final trilogy of songs, "Still Bleeding", "Tug of War", and "Death Has Died", an emotional roller-coaster. [17] "Still Bleeding" deals with hurtful words, "Tug of War" with the difficulties of surrendering one's "final god," and "Death Has Died" with the insurmountable realization of Jesus's return. [17] On "Tug of War", Krizz Kaliko expresses that he is in the midst of a war for his soul. Nyon explained that "the ministry from an artist to artist standpoint that may get overlooked, is that the Strange Music artist has made songs expressing a desire to want to believe and live for God and this could begin the pouring into what Tech & Krizz have longed for so many years." [17] Near the end of his review, Nyon expressed that the transparency of Mineo "makes it feel as though we should be all be interceding for him," and commented that "if we are truthful, we realize we are no better than our brothers and sisters. We are all in need of grace." [17]
During the album's recording, Mineo described that album as having a "bright" electronic feel and an experimental and progressive sound. [18] Allmusic stated that the album "showcases the rapper's spiritual-themed lyrics and often progressive, electronic-influenced hip hop tracks." [19] Angela Lu of World described the album as a mix of hip hop with reggaeton and jazz. [20] Andrea Williams described the style of the album as "a funky concoction of all of his musical influences, including hymns, heavy metal, hip-hop and classical." [15] Jamie Lee Rake of HM detailed that musically, Heroes for Sale "runs the gamut of styles to complement the differing couplets. Reggaeton, dubstep, New Orleans second line marching band rhythms, acid jazz, psychedelic funk, and jack swing collide and coalesce behind the mic Mineo and his several guests hold." [21] Mark Rice described the album as experimenting with a wide and eclectic variety of styles ranging from reggae to R&B to heavy metal. [16] Rice called the song "AYO!" New York-inspired techno rock and described "Still Bleeding" as featuring a classical symphonic sound. [16] According to Rice, "Caught Dreaming" displays an alternative pop styling, while "Wild Things" is "an almost straight-up heavy metal song, complete with screaming." [16] Nyon Smith called the track "Wild Things" as Mineo's step into heavy metal and described the tracks "Uno Uno Seis", featuring Lecrae, and "The Saints", featuring KB and Trip Lee, as Christian anthems. [17] Nyon considered "Uno Uno Seis" to be "reminiscent of eighties New York "Wild Style" park parties – a feel-good track to tour with that expresses the diversity of the church." [17] According to Nyon, the album contains two songs which play "straight New York," "AYO!" and "Cocky". [17] "AYO!", the album's lead single, Nyon described as the most radio-ready track, and in regard to "Cocky" Nyon stated that "the boom-bap track produced by Skrip has an echoing vocal sample and a monotonous, Terminator-style bass stab that indiscriminately leads to broken necks." [17] The song "Still Bleeding" Nyon called a "chilling track over cinematic orchestration." [17] Anthony Peronto of Christian Music Zine said that "You Will" and "Uno Uno Sies" "unexpectedly have a dance-influence" and that on "Wild Things", the "black sheep" of the album, Mineo's screaming "beats John Cooper's metal-influenced screaming on "Monster" by a long shot[.]" [22] markryan1976 of New Release Tuesday noted the opening jungle drum beat to "Wild Things" before the electric guitar line comes in. [23]
The album artwork was handled by Invisible Creature, a graphic design studio founded by Don and Ryan Clark of the metalcore band Demon Hunter. According to Rapzilla, the album cover was created mostly through practical effects without photo manipulation software. [5]
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [24] |
CCM Magazine | [25] |
Christian Music Zine | 4.75/5 [22] |
ChristCore | [26] |
Cross Rhythms | [27] |
HM | [21] |
Jesus Freak Hideout | [16] [28] |
Louder Than the Music | [29] |
New Release Tuesday | [23] |
Rapzilla | [17] |
Heroes for Sale garnered high praise from music critics. Upon release of Andy Mineo's first single from the album, "AYO!", Rapzilla called Heroes for Sale "definitely the most anticipated album of 2013[!]" [1] Nyon Smith rated the album four out of five, stating that "on his first official retail album, the self-proclaimed nerd-in-glasses rises to the occasion like Wichita State in the Final Four." [17] He said that the intimacy of the album threw him off for a moment, as Mineo's mixtape Formerly Known was not nearly as dark and personal. [17] Nyon finished his review by saying "although well produced, the production at times feels a bit forced or overproduced. And as with most albums, there are a couple of songs that could have been trimmed. Regardless, Heroes For Sale is one of, if not the best album released in 2013 so far." [17] Both reviewers for Jesus Freak Hideout gave the album four stars out of five. Mark Rice said that "there isn't one dull song or misfire in the entire 65 minute runtime of Heroes For Sale," but stated that the darkness, transparency, and bluntness of the album might throw many listeners off, and the heavy content "leaves little room to breathe". [16] Rice also felt that the album lyrically and music-wise was not "anything vastly different from what many are noticing to be the 'Reach Records formula'... ...but Mineo's album is so vastly unique in other aspects that it is hardly a knock against it." [16] Kevin Hoskins felt that the songs "Curious," " Ex Nihilo," and "You Will" served only as filler, but praised the album overall, stating that "all in all, any fan of the rap/hip hop world will want to pick up and will enjoy it thoroughly, despite the handful of minor missteps." [28] markryan1976 of New Release Tuesday rate the album a full five stars, listing the songs "Superhuman", "Ex Nihilo", "AYO!", "Bitter", "Wild Things", and "Uno Uno Seis" as the highlight tracks on the album. [23] He mentioned in his review that "when I first received this to listen to the track order was not yet finalized and I wasn't overly impressed. When the track order was announced and I listened to the album the way the artist intended it to be listened to, the album took on a life." [23] Anthony Peronto for Christian Music Zine rated the album four-point-seventy-five out of five, stating that "I have to be honest and say that Heroes For Sale is the best debut album in Reach Records history." [22] At CCM Magazine , Matt Conner felt that "Heroes for Sale reveal[s] personal intimate details of a life left open, while the varied sounds and styles show Mineo reaching into his big bag of musical tricks." [25] Matt Collar of Allmusic found that the album "showcases the rapper's spiritual-themed lyrics and often progressive, electronic-influenced hip-hop tracks." [24] At HM , Jamie Lee Rake rated the album three-point-five out of five, aiming some criticism at the abundance of sung choruses but nevertheless calling the album "a solid debut" in which Mineo is "transparent to a fault, which is probably his point." [21] Cross Rhythms' Steve Hayes gave the album a full ten squares, proclaiming the album to be "an essential set." [27] At Louder Than the Music, Rich Smith felt that this was "a brilliant debut album and well worth checking out" because the release features "production quality [that] is top notch and really blends and cuts the different styles of hip-hop, R&B and rock well, along with great lyrics and slick raps". [29] Founder Bryce Cooley of ChristCore saying that the release was "Spirit-Filled" on which contains "interesting, and challenging lyrics, set to well produced beats". [26]
The album debuted at number 11 on the Billboard 200 chart, with first-week sales of 28,000 copies in the United States. [30] In its second week the album sold 4,700 more copies bringing its total to 32,000. [31]
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Superhuman" | Keith Cook, Danika Lukasiewicz, Chris Mackey, Andy Mineo, Joseph Prielozny | Joseph Prielozny and Dirty Rice | 5:00 |
2. | "Ex Nihilo" (featuring Christon Gray) | Christon Gray, Mineo, Courtney Peebles | J.R. for So Hot Productions | 3:33 |
3. | "AYO!" | Mineo, Peebles | J.R. | 4:03 |
4. | "You Will" | Gabriel Azucena, Kameron Glasper, Mineo | Gawvi | 4:09 |
5. | "The Saints" (featuring KB &Trip Lee) | Kevin Burgess, William L. Barefield III, Mineo, George Ramirez | GROC for Beat Mekanickz | 3:58 |
6. | "Caught Dreaming" (featuring for KING & COUNTRY) | Jeremy Griffith, Mineo, Peebles, Joel Smallbone, Luke Smallbone | Jeremey S. H. Griffith, Andy Mineo, and J.R. | 4:04 |
7. | "Bitter" | Alex Medina, Mineo, Abraham Olaleye | Alex Medina and D-Flow (The Brassman) | 3:39 |
8. | "Shallow" (featuring Swoope) | Matthew Massaro, Mineo, Prielozny, Allen Swoope, Benjamin Leroy Thom, Tyshane Thompson | 808 & Elite, Joseph Prielozny (additional), and Andy Mineo (additional) | 4:46 |
9. | "Wild Things" | Michael Jefferson, Mineo, Derrick Omondi Okoth, Prielozny, Thompson | Tyshane, ThaInnaCircle, and Joseph Prielozny | 3:43 |
10. | "Take Me Alive" | Mineo, Thompson | Tyshane | 3:24 |
11. | "Uno Uno Seis" (featuring Derek Minor (uncredited) & Lecrae) | Derek Johnson, Medina, Mineo, Lecrae Moore | Alex Medina and Andy Mineo (additional) | 4:33 |
12. | "Cocky" | Skrip Adriel Cruz, Mineo | Skrip | 3:16 |
13. | "Curious" | Billy Dorsey, Dunlap Exclusive, Torrance Esmond, Phillip D. Guillory, Telford Birmingham Ii, Mineo, Tyler Rohn | TheBridge Tyler Rohn and Heat Academy | 4:26 |
14. | "Still Bleeding" (featuring Co Campbell) | Co Campbell, Mineo, Chris Morgan, Prielozny | Andy Mineo, Chris Morgan, Joseph Prielozny (additional) | 4:06 |
15. | "Tug Of War" (featuring Krizz Kaliko) | Dunlap Exclusive, Esmond, Mineo, Krizz Kaliko | Heat Academy | 4:32 |
16. | "Death Has Died" | Tim Dillon, Mineo, Peebles | J.R. | 3:58 |
Total length: | 65:10 |
Chart | Peak position |
---|---|
US [32] | 11 |
US Rap [32] | 4 |
US Christian [32] | 1 |
UK Christian [33] | 2 |
US Gospel [32] | 1 |
US Digital [32] | 6 |
US Independent [32] | 2 |
Lecrae Devaughn Moore is an American Christian rapper, singer, songwriter, record producer, record executive, and actor. To date, he has released ten studio albums and three mixtapes as a solo artist, and has released three studio albums, a remix album, one EP, and numerous singles as the leader of the hip hop group 116 Clique.
Rapzilla is a Christian hip hop online magazine. The website contains sections on the latest news, album reviews, articles, interviews, music downloads, videos, release dates and columns.
The discography of Lecrae, an American Christian hip hop artist, consists of 11 studio albums, two of which were collaborative; four mixtapes; two extended plays, one of which was collaborative; 130 singles, including 75 as a featured performer; 73 music videos, including 37 as a featured performer; and 86 guest and other appearances. Lecrae debuted with Real Talk in 2004 through Reach Records; the album was re-issued the following year by Cross Movement Records. After the Music Stops followed in 2006 and his third solo album, Rebel, was released in 2008 and reached No. 1 on the Gospel chart, the first Christian hip hop album to do so. Rehab, his fourth solo album, was released in 2010 and reached No. 1 on the Gospel, Christian, and Independent charts, and garnered a nomination at the 53rd Grammy Awards. Rehab: The Overdose, was released on January 11, 2011, and peaked at No. 1 on the Christian and Gospel charts. Lecrae began garnering mainstream attention when he performed at the 2011 BET Hip Hop Awards Cypher and was featured on the Statik Selektah song "Live and Let Live" from his Population Control album.
Church Clothes is the first mixtape by Christian hip hop artist Lecrae, released for free on May 10, 2012, and hosted by DJ Don Cannon. It featured No Malice of Clipse on the song "Darkest Hour", and included production work by 9th Wonder, Boi-1da, S1 and Street Symphony. Label-mates Tedashii and Andy Mineo, as well as other fellow Christian hip-hop artists such as Dre Murray, Thi'sl, Swoope, Christon Gray, and Braille, also made appearances on the album. The mixtape was downloaded 100,000 times in 48 hours, and met with critical acclaim. It received controversy in Christian media upon its release due to its condemnation of hypocrisy in the Christian Church and Lecrae's collaboration with the mainstream producer Don Cannon. A shorter, remastered EP version was released on iTunes on June 25, 2012. The EP debuted at number 10 on the Billboard Christian Albums and Gospel Albums charts.
Gravity is the sixth studio album by American Christian hip hop artist Lecrae, released on September 4, 2012. The album features appearances from Big K.R.I.T., Mathai, Ashthon Jones, Sho Baraka and Mali Music, along with labelmates Trip Lee, Andy Mineo, Derek Minor, who was formerly known as PRo, and Tedashii. Producers on the album include DJ Khalil, Street Symphony along with his production team Heat Academy, and The Watchmen. The first single off the album, "I Know", was released on July 24, 2012, and was followed by "Tell the World" featuring Mali Music on August 15, 2012, and "Mayday" featuring Big K.R.I.T. and Ashthon Jones on August 30, 2012. Reach Records released five music videos for the album: "Lord Have Mercy", featuring Tedashii along with No Malice of Clipse, on August 1, 2012, "Tell the World", featuring Mali Music, on October 19, 2012, "Mayday", featuring Big K.R.I.T. and Ashthon Jones, on December 13, 2012, "Fakin'", featuring Thi'sl, on February 1, 2013, and "Confe$$ions", featuring David Banner, on April 30, 2013.
Andrew Aaron Mineo, is an American Christian hip hop artist, producer, music executive, and video director based in New York City. He is signed to Reach Records and his creative initiative Miner League. In addition to his solo work, he is a member of Reach Records' hip hop collective 116 Clique.
The discography of American Christian hip hop artist Andy Mineo, formerly known as C-Lite, consists of three studio albums, three mixtapes, one compilation album, twenty-one singles, including seven as a featured performer, fourteen music videos, including six as a featured artist, and fifteen guest appearances on various albums. Originally from Syracuse, Mineo initially achieved success as a producer in Upstate New York, and was a member of the hip hop group Fat Camp, signed to Syracuse University's Marshall Street Records. After moving to New York City where he re-dedicated his life to Christ, he closed down his production studio and restarted his career. He released his first mixtape Sin is Wack Vol. 1 in 2009. After providing sung vocals for the song "Background" by Lecrae from the album Rehab, he experienced a surge in popularity and became highly sought after for collaborations. His 2011 single "In My City" featuring Efrain from Doubledge also garnered attention, as did his appearance on the song "Reverse" by Tedashii from Blacklight. He signed to Reach Records in 2011 and dropped his stage name "C-Lite" in favor of his legal name. Under this name he released another mixtape, Formerly Known, in 2011. In May 2012 he debuted a four episode web series entitled Saturday Morning Car-Tunez in which he remixed classic hip hop songs. The four songs were subsequently released for free as a compilation album. His debut full-length studio album, Heroes for Sale, was released April 2013.
Tyshane Thompson, professionally known as Beam, is a Jamaican-American rapper, singer, songwriter, and record producer. He is the son of dancehall and gospel reggae singer Papa San. He was one-half of the production duo 808&Elite. Beam released his debut studio album, Alien, on February 4, 2022. It includes collaborations with Justin Bieber, Jorja Smith, and his father, among others.
Derek Laurence Johnson Jr., better known by his stage name Derek Minor and former stage name PRo, is an American Christian rapper, singer, songwriter, record producer, entrepreneur, actor, and screenwriter. He co-founded the hip-hop record label Reflection Music Group (RMG) with Doc Watson, and signed to Reach Records in a joint venture between the two labels in 2011. In 2012, Johnson announced that he had changed his stage name from Pro to Derek Minor. In 2014, he announced that as his two-album contract with Reach was complete, he would no longer be publishing releases through that label.
Reach Records is an American independent record label specializing in Christian hip hop. The label was founded in 2004 by Ben Washer and the hip-hop artist Lecrae. In addition to Lecrae, the Reach Records roster contains artists like Tedashii, Trip Lee, Andy Mineo, 1K Phew, WHATUPRG, Anike, Hulvey, Limoblaze, and Jackie Hill Perry. The hip-hop collective 116 operates under the label and consists primarily of the label's solo acts. The artists Sho Baraka, Derek Minor, Aha Gazelle, KB, and Gawvi were formerly signed to the label, and DJ Official was under the label until his death.
"Confessions", styled "Confe$$ions", is a Christian hip hop song by Lecrae from his album Gravity, released on September 4, 2012. Lyrically, the song critiques the pursuit of wealth and expresses the emptiness and lack of peace that comes with materialism.
The discography of Trip Lee, an American Christian hip hop artist, consists of eight studio albums, including three as a founding member of the group 116 Clique, one EP with 116 Clique, thirteen singles, including three as a featured performer and two with 116 Clique, fourteen music videos, including three as a featured performer and two with 116 Clique, a contributed track to a compilation album, and twenty-nine guest appearances.
Rapzilla Presents... King Kulture: Stop the Traffic is a compilation charity album from the Christian hip hop website Rapzilla, released on August 27, 2013. In partnership with Syntax Distribution, Rapzilla donated all proceeds from the album to Inter-Varsity's New York City Urban Project, a non-profit organization dedicated to stopping human trafficking in New York City. The project features contributions from emcee and production artists such as Andy Mineo, MC Jin, FLAME, Sho Baraka, Canton Jones, Wit, Propaganda, KIDD, Rhema Soul, and Gawvi, among others.
Church Clothes 2, officially Church Clothes, Vol. 2, is the second mixtape by Christian hip hop artist Lecrae, released on November 7, 2013 by Reach Records. Hosted by Don Cannon, it follows Lecrae's previous mixtape, Church Clothes, and Grammy Award-winning full-length album Gravity, both of which came out in 2012. Two versions of the album were released, a free version with host Don Cannon, and a commercial version off iTunes without the DJ. The first single off the album, "Round of Applause", was released on May 14, 2013. On May 21, a remixed version of the song, featuring rapper B.o.B, was released. A second single off the album, "I'm Turnt", dropped on October 18, 2013. The mixtape was downloaded over 100,000 times on DatPiff.com in the first two weeks and debuted at No. 21 on the Billboard 200 chart, No. 1 on the Top Christian and Gospel charts, and No. 3 on the Top Rap chart.
Beautiful Eulogy is a Christian experimental hip hop group and production team from Portland, Oregon, signed to the label Humble Beast. Composed of rappers Braille and Odd Thomas and producer Courtland Urbano, the group coalesced in 2011 while the three artists were involved in the creation of Braille's seventh release, Native Lungs. Known for its experimental and eclectic sound, the group melds myriad styles of hip hop with genres such as folk, electronic, hymn tunes, and modern worship music. After contributing a song to the charity compilation King Kulture and making a guest appearance on Lecrae's Church Clothes, the band released its debut album, Satellite Kite, on June 19, 2012. A second album, Instruments of Mercy, came out on October 29, 2013. Called one of the most innovative hip hop groups in Portland, Beautiful Eulogy has met with critical acclaim, with particular praise directed at the group's creative, unconventional sound and deep theological lyrics.
The discography of Propaganda, an American Christian hip hop and spoken word artist and poet from Los Angeles, California, consists of five studio albums, two EPs, twelve compilation appearances, eleven music videos, including one as a featured performer, and twenty-three guest appearances.
Anomaly is the seventh studio album by American Christian hip hop artist Lecrae, released on September 9, 2014, through Reach Records. The album features appearances from Crystal Nicole, Kari Jobe, and For King & Country, along with label-mate Andy Mineo. Anomaly met with a positive critical reception, and the song "Nuthin", released for streaming as a single on July 1, 2014, was nominated for the 2014 BET Hip Hop Awards in the best Impact Track category. The album also fared well commercially, debuting at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 with over 88,000 copies sold. It also debuted at No. 1 on the Top Gospel Albums chart, marking the first time that any artist has ever topped both the 200 and Gospel charts. Anomaly won Rap/Hip Hop Album of the Year at the 2015 GMA Dove Awards, and Rap, Hip Hop Gospel CD of the Year at the 2015 Stellar Awards. Two songs earned a nomination for the 2015 Grammy Awards; "All I Need Is You" was nominated for Best Rap Performance, and "Messengers", featuring For King & Country, won Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song.
Satellite Kite is the debut album by the Portland, Oregon-based experimental hip hop trio Beautiful Eulogy, released through Humble Beast Records in both commercial and free formats on June 19, 2012. The album was praised for its eclectic and heavily folk-influenced sound, unconventional production, highly skilled rapping, and deep theological lyrics.
Instruments of Mercy is the second studio album by Portland, Oregon-based experimental hip hop trio Beautiful Eulogy, released through Humble Beast Records on October 29, 2013, in both free and commercial format. Like its predecessor, the album features a highly eclectic folk-hip hop fusion melded with numerous other styles such as electronic, indie, hymn tunes, and contemporary worship music. Courtland Urbano, the main producer of the trio, eschewed the use of digitally-generated effects and instrumentation in composing the music for Instruments of Mercy, instead relying solely on analog and natural sounds. A single from the album, "Vital Lens", was released as a digital download on September 10, 2013. The album fared well commercially, charting at No. 6 on the Billboard Top Gospel Albums chart, and was lauded by critics for its diverse and creative sound and deeply theological lyrics. PQ Monthly called the group "one [of] the most innovative hip-hop acts in Portland."
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