| Living Proof | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| | ||||
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | 1993 | |||
| Genre | Rap | |||
| Label | Hollywood BASIC [1] | |||
| Producer | Solid Productions, Organized Konfusion | |||
| Lifers Group chronology | ||||
| ||||
Living Proof is an album by the incarcerated rap collective Lifers Group, released in 1993. [2] [3] The collective was made up of inmates serving sentences of 25 years to double-life. [4] [5] The album followed the collective's 1991 debut EP and their Grammy-nominated long-form video. [6] Royalties from the album were put toward the Lifers Group Juvenile Awareness Program. [7]
The album was recorded inside East Jersey State Prison, in Rahway, New Jersey. A temporary studio was built in the prison, and the collective had a week to record. [8] Living Proof was produced by Solid Productions, with, on some tracks, Organized Konfusion. [9] The members of the collective were credited by their nicknames and their prison serial numbers. [10] They wrote all of the lyrics and assisted with some of the musical backing. [11] A video was filmed at the prison for the first single, "Short Life of a Gangsta". [12]
| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | |
| Chicago Sun-Times | |
| Robert Christgau | |
| MusicHound R&B: The Essential Album Guide | |
| RapReviews | 7.5/10 [17] |
Trouser Press wrote that the album "trades intensity for a showcase of Rahway’s considerable lyrical/musical talents ... The problem is not in the message or the sound—as on-point as ever—but in the very anonymity of the performers." [3] The Gazette thought that "Ice-T may have scarier beats, but he can't top this for tragedy or credibility." [18]
The Chicago Sun-Times stated that "in addition to solid musical production and skillful lyrical flow, the Rahway crew rips a few choice rhymes on 'Jack U Back', a dis of gangsta rappers who glorify street life and mislead listeners about its perils." [14] The Miami Herald declared that the album "is a raw and numbing litany of recrimination, stupid choices and ruined lives, made all the more depressing because you know every word is true." [19]
MusicHound R&B: The Essential Album Guide deemed Living Proof "more refined than the first album, but ... still nothing incredibly compelling." [16]
| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "One Life to Live" | |
| 2. | "Let Me Out (Edit)" | |
| 3. | "Rise or Fall" | |
| 4. | "Prison Break 1" | |
| 5. | "Cuff' Em Up" | |
| 6. | "Emotional Violence" | |
| 7. | "Freestyle 1" | |
| 8. | "Out of Sight, Out of Mind" | |
| 9. | "Living Proof" | |
| 10. | "Short Life of a Gangsta" | |
| 11. | "Prison Break 2" | |
| 12. | "Prison is the Death of a Poor Man" | |
| 13. | "Back in the Days" | |
| 14. | "Jack U Back (So U Wanna Be a Gangsta)" | |
| 15. | "Short Life of a Gangsta (Organized Konfusion Mix)" |