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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars DOPE (but slept-on) lp- very sinister! Sadat X's steals it!
At first, I HATED this album... Lord Jamar especially [angered me].. but through time and many listens, I learned to LOVE IT!!! It's hardcore... It's East-coast 5% gangsta hiphop.. Smoked-out revolution... SADAT X steals the entire lp!!!! Every verse of his is memorable... The beats are PANCAKE fat.. produced by Lord Jamar, Buckwild and co-produced by Sadat X..Guests are...
Published on June 7, 2002 by Todd E. Jones

versus
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Up and Down like the Dow Industrial
Brand Nubian shocked heads from the jump. White, black, asian, and latinos all have at one time or another been exposed to this group of self-aware New York talent. "Everything is Everything" is one of those joints that many hip-hop peeps may have just straight up missed. This LP has it's fresh and not-so-fresh moments. Fortunately, editing on this piece is...
Published on June 25, 2001 by Chris G


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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars DOPE (but slept-on) lp- very sinister! Sadat X's steals it!, June 7, 2002
This review is from: Everything Is Everything (Audio CD)
At first, I HATED this album... Lord Jamar especially [angered me].. but through time and many listens, I learned to LOVE IT!!! It's hardcore... It's East-coast 5% gangsta hiphop.. Smoked-out revolution... SADAT X steals the entire lp!!!! Every verse of his is memorable... The beats are PANCAKE fat.. produced by Lord Jamar, Buckwild and co-produced by Sadat X..Guests are all unknown except for Busta Rhymes in the extremely violent and raw "Alladat". The only songs I'm not feeling too much are "Nubian Jam" and "Hold On" which uses the simply Red loop.. The best songs are "Word Is Bond"
"Straight Off Da Head" ( a freestyle joint with a live band)
"Down For The Real", "Alladat" f/Busta Rhymes, "Lik Dem Muthafukkaz", "Step Into The Cipher" Some songs have live instrumentation like "Nubian Jam", "Straight Off Da Head", and "Down For The Real" and also "Claimin' I'm A Criminal"...

1. Word Is Bond (single... funky bassline, guitar, and horn along with live piano keys. This is a full song. Sadat X gets real ghetto and funky on this one.)

2. Straight off da Head -(freestyle improv with live band. Dope!!! Sadat X steals the show.. They have skills on the mic and this song proves it!)
3. Weed Vs. Weaves (Interlude) -(skit about spending money on weed instead of your girlfriend's hair)

4. Nubian Jam - (lame, smoothed out commercial attempt. the beat is soft too. RnB hook that goes no where. The song is about nothing really.)

5. Alladat (f/Busta Rhymes) - (DOPE!!! Sadat X solo produced by Buckwild and Busta is on the hook. This is a wild track.. made to [anger someone]. One of the best Dotty X tracks ever!)

6. Step into da Cipher (f/Maestro Manny, Snagglepuss and others) - (this posse cut uses Black Moon's scratched hook "In the cipher with my boys, you know we get busy". This is a dope track with a dope jazz guitar loop)

7. Sweatin Bullets - (sinister track with a hypnotic bassline.. it's about shooting people.)

8. Lookin' at God (Interlude) - (Farakhan speech)

9. Lick Dem Muthaphuckas [Remix] - (incredible!!!! The beat pounds. It's pancake fat. Real sinister, Sadat X gets wicked and the scratched hook is dope using Redman's voice.. "No matter who you are, you still catch a bullet scar!")

10. Another Day in the Beast (Thoughts from a Criminal) - (answering machine message from jail)

11. Claimin' I'm a Criminal - (slow and sad song about prison, jail and being arrested. Sadat X gives a very sad verse. Singing comes in too but it's well done because it sets up a very somber and serious atmopshere without being corny. Chuck D's vocal sample from "Black Steel" is used in the hook. Good track but very serious.. a little too long but still good.)

12. Gang Bang - (this is kind of lame and trite. It uses FREDDY'S DEAD sample. This is about police. The hook is chanted "Gang bang! Gang bang! Po-lice ain't nothing but a gang bang!")

13. Down for the Real - (DOPE!!! Slow, jazzed out live instrumentation with a West Coast feel to it. Sadat X is incredible. He tells a very vivid story. One of the best verses he ever made.)

14. Return of the Dread - (Lord Jamar solo.. The beat is dope.. very thick and 'pancake fat'. I like Dorry X more but this is decent.)

15. What the...? - (sinister and jumpy-type thick beat. There's no real hook on this except for them saying 'What the fukk this all about?" once before news clips about people getting shot. IT's dreary and sinister. Lord Jamar talks aboutb killing your mother. It's a good song but not one of the best.)

16. Hold On (f/Starr) - (ahh.. lame... Simple Red's "Holding Back The Years" is used. It's as blatent as Puffy's "I'll Be Missing You". They loop the beat AND the hook is the same except it's sung by some guy named Starr. "I keep holding on..."... It's a message to young black men to hold on. Lord Jamar says "You think you're mighty but whitey got your head sick. Sadat X steals the show with a cool verse. That's the only good thing about this song.)

The slices and scratches by Sincere are done well too.. especially in songs like "Step Into The Cipher" and Lik Dem Muthafukkaz" which uses Redman's line "No matter who you are, you still catch a bullet scar!" This album is severely slept on... Most people who like Brand Nubian didn't like this album.. I hated it at first It is DIFFERENT for Brand Nubian.. It's ANGRY, it's raw but at the same time, it has a smoothed out feel in some tracks musically. (This is around the time "Ready To Die" came out..) On this lp, Busta Rhymes does the hook where he yells "Fukk dem ni99az over there who think they all a dat! They think they all a dat!" and on the FOUNDATION lp, Busta Rhymes does the hook where he yells "Let's Dance! I know you got the feeling!"... It's a whole different vibe... Where IN GOD WE TRUST was angry and raw and revolutionary, it was a little more religious. EVERYTHING IS EVERYTHING is much more sinister and less religious.. even though the 5% nation is represented here.
It's a dope slept on album. There is a west-coast vibe to some of the tracks too.. If you like Sadat X, get it! It is different from Brand Nubian's "One For All" and "Foundation". If anything, it's more like a mellow and more sinister "In God We Trust". Sadat X is incredible on this lp. Every single verse by him is memorable. Lord Jamar looks like a fool next to him. The lp really grew on me. Like I said before, I used to hate the lp.. but now, I love it. 8.75 out of 10

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Up and Down like the Dow Industrial, June 25, 2001
By 
Chris G (Chicago, IL United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Everything Is Everything (Audio CD)
Brand Nubian shocked heads from the jump. White, black, asian, and latinos all have at one time or another been exposed to this group of self-aware New York talent. "Everything is Everything" is one of those joints that many hip-hop peeps may have just straight up missed. This LP has it's fresh and not-so-fresh moments. Fortunately, editing on this piece is proper, scattering the gems throughout the album. Nubian was at a strange time in 1994. Puba went off on his own little solo venture, and Alamo, well, Alamo must have been doin' his own thing as well. DJ Sincere is on the decks this time. This gives Dottie-X and Jamar a chance to shine on their own and express themselves without the quite possibly overbearing prescence of Puba. Dope undergound talent is exposed here in a major way. Check out track 6 "Step into the Cipher" for proof of this. Overall though, "Everything is Everything" will leave you feeling the way you did after watching "The Empire Strikes Back", unsettled and eager for the next episode. Peace.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Brand Nu takes a different route with this one, January 20, 2005
By 
DukeOfEarl (Phoenix, AZ United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Everything Is Everything (Audio CD)
And I thought "In God We Trust" was dark! That album shines happy as the sun compared to "Everything Is Everything!" The cursing is severely worse here, and they basically take violent and angry themes a la "Pass The Gat" and "Black And Blue" and basically turn it into a whole album. They drop almost all the religious and righteousness rhetoric and really do get up on some gangsta sh#t. Maybe Brand Nubian was paying too much attention to Tupac's idea of revolution at this time(1994). This still turns out to be a pretty good album, you just need to beware before entering it.
Most of the album contains talk about guns and inflicting violence upon others, especially the "devils" out there. The first song, "Word Is Bond," is a banger and probably the only uptempo track besides "Alladat," perhaps. If you don't want to hear them talk about dark, violent situations, then you may only want to listen to the first 5 or 6 songs. Sadat X and Lord Jamar actually get a solo song to themselves with "Alladat" and "Return Of The Dread," respectively. Sadat's is solid with Busta Rhymes ranting and cussing on the hook and at the end of the track, by which I usually skip ahead because I can't stand Busta's explicit rambling at the end. Jamar's is pretty good too, with a memorable beat, and it does delve heavily into violence. If you're gonna stay for the violent songs, the best example is the viciously dark "Sweatin' Bullets" which works well for them, and Sadat's verse does outshine Jamar's. "Claimin' I'm A Criminal" is possibly the best song here where Jamar and Sadat lay down unforgettable verses. Jamar starts off and talks about getting arrested, while Sadat continues and talks about living in jail, and the verse is admittedly pretty sad. The last track, "Hold On," may have a blatant sample and is hit-or-miss, but I enjoy this one every now and then and can see what they're trying to accomplish with this song.
Actually once you familiarize yourself with all the songs of this album, it's apparent that no one track stands too tall above the rest and no one track falls below what they're aiming for. In fact, this might be Brand Nubian's most consistent album, because if you think about it, even "All For One" was quite uneven. It's just that not many of these songs rank up to the best of their other works. Any Brand Nubian greatest hits albums that come out in the future probably won't feature too much of this material. The only tracks that can be considered as possibilities are "Word Is Bond," "Straight Off The Head," and "Claimin' I'm A Criminal." Actually, many of you might enjoy the posse cut "Step Into The Cipher" with three other obscure MC's joining in. I think Lord Jamar was the highlight of this album overall. To the last guy who is obsessed with Sadat: Datty X holds it down, but they are a few tracks, like "Hold On," where he rambles on about nothing. Jamar's verses were always pertinent to the hook or whatever point they were trying to make in EVERY SONG.
"Everything Is Everything" is not vintange Brand Nubian, but it doesn't mean that this album sucks though. I think if anything, they were showing that they could do the gangsta stuff just as well as any other rappers at the time. Although they leave out the righteousness and Islamic messages, the fact that this album was done in such a single focused manner must mean that they were trying to get some point across, even if it is hard to swallow at first! They beat us over the head with how much they dislike the cops, black on black violence, and all the "devils" keeping them down. Still, the fact that this album was consistent and that it had great production means this album deserves four stars at least. Lord Jamar produces nearly every track, with Sadat co-producing some, and this has got to be the best-produced Brand Nubian joint. It's all dark and mellow, except "Word Is Bond," and live bands and instruments are employed on a number of tracks. Check out the beats on "Straight Off The Head," "Down For The Real,"(maybe the best one) "Nubian Jam," amongst many other memorables. They did go a little overboard on the sampling, though. "Everything Is Everything" is not an album that you should pigeonhole Brand Nubian as, but it's still worthwhile and a testament to their ability as artists, rather than preachers.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Everything is Not Everything, December 27, 2010
By 
Brian White (Manitoba, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Everything Is Everything (Audio CD)
Brand Nubian is one of the best groups of their time, but this album lacked something that their first two albums had, and for years I've gave it tries but doesn't get me excited like they can easily do.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Everythang is Everythang, October 23, 2009
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Everything Is Everything (Audio CD)
Well I bought this cd according to amazon on 7/20/07 I did not listen to this cd until 10/22/09. Yeah thats pretty slept on. Why the delay,can't really say I have so much music it probably got lost in the shuffle. Anyway WOW what a good album. This thing is the perfect blend of hardcore and smooth. Some may disagree with me, but I do not like In God We Trust at all. Ths is so much better than that cd it is ridiculous. The rhymes are better the beats are for better. The subject matter is darker, but it was 94. That was the year of Ready to Die, The murder was the case soundtrack and Illmatic oh and don't forget Mc Eiht We come strapped. The pro black was dead and Gangsta was king so this cd fit the time. Rap has fallen off extremlly badly since these days. Pick this up 55555 stars.
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4.0 out of 5 stars "You can't cut off the head of a fatal Disease..", May 20, 2008
This review is from: Everything Is Everything (Audio CD)
Decipher that classic line from Sadat-X, tell me that he didn't steal the whole show on this album, and I'll look at you funny...

Get this one- I Promise it will make you smile in a "thank God for hip hop" kinda way.

Bonis....
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5.0 out of 5 stars Peace to the GODS, December 7, 2006
This review is from: Everything Is Everything (Audio CD)
If there were ever an album to put on while buildin in the cypha this would be it. On point rhymes w/dope beats that'll be in your head for days. As far as who's droppin science... count on Sadat X to come correct w/skills that steal the show. Great Music. Peace!
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4.0 out of 5 stars Jamar and Dereck X Keeps Holding On..., December 31, 2005
By 
Chandler "Infamous" (Atlanta (College Park), Georgia) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Everything Is Everything (Audio CD)
Now like many Brand Nubian fans, I first started with their wonderful classic "One For All" and went from there. Then their style started to fade as time went on. Despite Grand Puba and DJ Alamo leaving the group around '92 and went a solo route, Lord Jamar and Dereck aka Sadat X were able to pull their weight without him.

I remember seeing the first track "Word Is Bond" on Yahoo music videos, so I assume it was one of their singles. The track itself is okay to begin with if you want something to set the tone of the CD. "Straight Off Da Head" is a weeded freestyle where X and Jamar trade off verses, managing to keep the track on point. "Alladat" is a fast paced song done by Sadat X and the hook is done by Busta Rhymes. "Step Into Da Cipher" is another freestyle joint that sounds pretty nice. After that song, the mood will change, going from their lively energetic songs, back to their pro-African American songs. "Lick Dem Muthaph****s (remix)" has a very mellow and slow beat to the song, and yes a lot of people have pointed out that there is a Redman sample from Tonites the Nite. "Gang Bang" is a song that calls the Police a gang that goes around and beats up people. Lord Jamar would have his own solo joint, "Return Of The Dread" that will make your head nod a bit. "Hold On" as many reviewers have pointed out has elements from the origonal song "Hold Back The Years", but the vocals from a singer named Starr, may leave listeners believe that it sounds kind of awkward, even though I like the song.

There are some faults that this duo may have. "Nubian Jam" should have been an R&B song, because it's too slow of a song for anyone to be rapping on. "Sweatin Bullets" really doesn't appeal to me as a listener, probably because I was disapointed that they went from their freestyle joints.

Overall, If you liked Brand Nubian's first two CDs, then I reccomed this one won't dissapoint you. The beats by Jamar and the duo's lyrics won't let you down.

Stand out tracks: Straight Off Da Head, Alladat, Step Into Da Cipher, Lick Dem Muthaphu***s (remix), Return Of The Dread
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4.0 out of 5 stars At First I wasn't sure, but...., December 19, 2005
This review is from: Everything Is Everything (Audio CD)
I got this cuz I have loved the Nubians at one time. I never heard any of the songs on this album, so I listened to samples. I loved the beats, but didn't know much about the lyrics since I heard samples. I decided to purchase it. Now, after I put the cd in my car, I was very suprised. After all of the positive messages that the Nubians had preached, before and after this album, all of the gang bang tracks suprised me. At first, I was mad. Now, don't get me wrong, I've listened to gang style hip hop such as all the Boot Camp Click, Tupac, get the pic. But with this huge jump it sounded like they were going with that whole gangsta trend that was going around. But, hey, Lord J and Dottie X still sounded good on the mic. Sadat especially killed it on the mic in the freestyle joint. So even though they totally changed their content formula, they still did it with style. And the beats, straight nice. Favorite song, Alladat, with then big underground mc Busta Rhymes, when he still had hunger. Bottom line, get it. It's not your classic Brand Nub's album, their best is Foundation, and then All For One. Yes I said it. But this is better than most, especially the garbage on the radio nowadays.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A Great One From Nubian, December 11, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Everything Is Everything (Audio CD)
This record displays the unity maintained by Brand Nubian even when Grand Puba pursued his solo career. Lord Jamar shines on this album, while Sadat X keeps us on his toes with his unique delivery and dope MC voice. This album was not meant to produce radio tracks but it is a clear representation of true hip-hop from one of NY's finest. The freestyle tracks are dope and reveal the essence of the truest MC trait... the freestyle. Pick this up if you can.
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