

Throw in their one-two production punch of eerie graveyard beats with creeping synths sinister keyboardwork and hard bass assisted by airy, synth, marijuana ecstasy tracks complimented by bluntly gangsta, at times unapologetically demonic lyrics to compliment, you have a promising horrorcore classic. Combine that with their meshing of voices as a group, and you get a monstrous MCing unit. The incredibly intricate and fast flows of Koop and Lord served as perfect compliment to the steady rapping of Juice and Paul. But despite this, Three 6 Mafia’s sophomore album fails to be better than its freshman effort, mostly because of a more prevalent, more annoying Gangsta Boo determined to detriment the album and compromise the entire work.Ĭomprised of Koopsta Knicca, Lord Infamous, DJ Paul, and Juicy J – with occasional help from other serviceable Prophet MC’s – Three 6 Mafia, as a unit, was possibly the best group in terms of the MCing. The funeral, death walk instrumentals complimented by the occasional atmospheric smoke beat the at-their-darkest-Satanic/at-their-softest-gangsta lyrics the killer MCing that Mystic Stylez had, it’s all there, even the MCing and production on The End were BETTER than Mystic Stylez. The follow up to it, The End, was also a success, but wasn’t the Epic god of an album that its predecessor was. Their debut Mystic Stylez was a regional, underground success. Review Summary: The End is Mystic Stylez 2, except with slightly better production and emcee - AWW Gangsta Boo.
