“Emeritus,” Webster tells us, means to be retired but to retain an honorary title. And if this really is Scarface’s final rap LP (he’s mentioned playing in a rock band afterwards, of all things), it ...
Scarface, the rapper, is retiring. We don t believe him. Sure, Brad Scarface Jordan is dropping his 9th proper album, Emeritus, which means retiring but maintaining your title. After 20 plus years in ...
As was the case with Michael Jordan and Jay Z, the announcement of retirement from the game has come to fall on deaf ears. The drop of Emeritus was supposed to be the swan song and the final curtain ...
Scarface’s Made, the southern lyricist’s seventh official solo album, almost never came out. Nearly two years ago, Face told SOHH he was quitting rap. He obviously didn't. One album later, Face is ...
“I write in tears and pray till it hurts,” Houston rapper emeritus Scarface offers on the excellent “Who Do You Believe In” on the grim, mournful M.A.D.E., an album that’s as much Old Testament as old ...
Rapper Scarface has confirmed reports that he is headed into retirement after the release of his anticipated album 'Emeritus.' In several interviews the Texas rapper, born Brad Jordan, has said that ...
The Geto Boy and Houston rap originator Scarface is one of the greatest rappers of all time — any era, any region, any subgenre, no qualifiers. Face announced a low-key retirement after his last album ...
As discussed on BrooklynVegan, Scarface has ditched the idea that 2008’s Emeritus will be his last record and is now preparing a new LP entitled Rooted. No word on the release of that record any time ...
When Brad “Scarface” Jordan announced that his last studio album (2009’s Emeritus) would be his final one, the claim was hard to believe. On one hand, the Houston rapper has enjoyed a 20-plus year ...
Everybody is excited over the new upcoming albums coming out this year, but there’s one that only true Hip Hop fans are secretly dying for. Scarface has announced that he will release a new album this ...
The Jesus and Mary Chain and Bruce Springsteen cherish the three-chord structures and hefty beats of the old Phil Spector girl-group productions. Glasvegas has built its sound on the same foundation.