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  1. Apr 28, 1998 · He also rhymed alongside East Coast heavyweights Prodigy from Mobb Deep, Black Thought from The Roots, Inspectah Deck from the Wu-Tang Clan, and Noreaga, along with Fat Joe and the Terror...

    • “Fast Money”
    • “Punish Me”
    • “Parental Discretion”
    • “Super Lyrical”
    • “Beware”
    • “Capital Punishment”
    • “Carribean Connection”
    • “Boomerang”
    • “Still Not A Player”
    • “The Dream Shatterer”

    Big Pun tries his hand at storytelling on “Fast Money,” a Danny O-produced selection that finds the Bronx bomber in the middle of a high-stakes heist. Going out in a blaze of glory alongside Cuban Linx, Big Pun and his partner in crime shoot it out with the cops before being rescued by Fat Joe and the rest of the Terror Squad on what makes for one ...

    Capital Punishmentmakes few concessions in terms of subject matter, but Big Pun provides a change of pace as he caters to the ladies on the Miss Jones-assisted number “Punish Me,” laying down game over production courtesy of Frank Nitty. Equally adept at wooing the fairer sex as he is packing a mac in the back, Big Pun delivers a plush duet with “P...

    The album’s closerends with a percussion-heavy number that includes a guest spot from Busta Rhymes, who lends his rambunctious vocals to the song’s hook while Big Pun pummels the track to bits. “New York ni**as is trigger happy, got Pataki scared/This town ain’t big enough for both of us and I ain’t goin’ nowhere,” Big Pun vows on the opening verse...

    Black Thought may be revered as one of the top lyricists in rap history in 2018, but 20 years ago, the Philly-bred rhyme animal was still one of the underground’s best-kept secrets due to a lack of widespread commercial success. However, The Roots’ frontman would get an opportunity to flex his skills for the greater rap audience on “Super Lyrical,”...

    After a short intro, Big Pun sets off his debut with “Beware,” a menacing selection on which the Bronx native eviscerates the competition with a flurry of bruising couplets. From promising a “flawless victory” to offering to “go blow for blow like Evander and Bowe,” Terror Squad’s top gun leaves no prisoners on this JuJu-produced heat-rock, leaving...

    Family ties get exposed on Capital Punishment‘s title-track, which includes nods to Big Pun’s wife, kids, siblings and cousins over production by Mike “Trauma” D & Jugrnaut. Anchored by a guest spot from Prospect, “Capital Punishment” takes aim at the government and local politicians alike and includes some of Pun’s most clever bars on the album.

    “Wanna rumble with Pun, huh,” Big Pun asks on “Caribbean Connection,” which pairs him with Wyclef Jean and Canibus, one of the most formidable rhyme animals of his era. Doing the bidding over an island-tinged backdrop provided by Wyclef, the two East Coast luminaries deliver a verse apiece, with Canibus taking home the bragging rights on this parti...

    “Now should I slit my wrists, go for it all or call it quits/Picture me taking my life, leaving my wife and my daughter s**t,” Big Pun ponders on “Boomerang,” which ranks among the more intense inclusions on the Capital Punishmenttracklist. Producer V.I.C. hooks up a backdrop that brings to mind a New York night with this sinister composition that ...

    Capital Punishmentmay be one of the hardest rap albums of all-time from top to bottom, but the album wouldn’t have reached the amount of success it did without the inclusion of “Still Not A Player,” a song that served as a statement not only for Big Pun but Latinos in hip-hop. Produced by Knobody and featuring R&B singer Joe, “Still Not A Player” b...

    Announcing himself as “the first Latin rapper to baffle your skull,” Big Pun puts on an emceeing master class on “The Dream Shatterer,” one of the most explosive offerings on the heavyweight’s ’98 debut. Produced by Domingo, “The Dream Shatterer” contains the type of rhyme spills that put fear in the heart of friends and foes alike and is a testame...

    • Preezy Brown
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  3. Inspectah Deck – featured artist; Joe – featured artist; Ju-Ju – producer; Jugrnaut – producer; Knobody – producer; Ola Kudu – creative direction; Adam Kudzin – engineer; L.E.S. – producer; Matt Life – executive producer; Laurie Marks – A&R coordination; Mike D. – A&R; Minnesota – producer; Miss Jones – featured artist ...

    • 71:53
    • April 28, 1998
  4. Nov 4, 2020 · 9 Pakinamac Pt. 1 (Skit) 01:36. 10 You Ain't A Killer 04:15. 11 Pakinamac Pt. 2 (Skit) 00:57. 12 Caribbean Connection (Ft. Wyclef Jean) 03:24. 13 Glamour Life (Ft. Terror Squad) 04:44. 14 Capital Punishment (Ft. Prospect) 04:20. 15 Uncensored (Skit) (Ft. Funkmaster Flex) 02:13. 16 I'm Not A Player 03:41.

  5. Apr 28, 2018 · Capital Punishment includes a number of guest appearances by then-known quantities in hip-hop such as Busta Rhymes, Inspectah Deck of the Wu-Tang Clan, and Wyclef Jean. Yet the album also held it down for the Bronx with its features, giving time to his Terror Squad associates Armageddon, Prospect, and the aforementioned Fat Joe.

  6. Read on as BET.com takes a look at several key co-defendants who went on trial with the Puerto Rican MC to deliver his classic Capital Punishment verdict.

  7. Jason Hunter, or Inspectah Deck, was born July 6, 1970, in Brooklyn, New York, but he was raised in Staten Island, New York. As a rapper from Wu-Tang Clan, and a producer, Deck

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