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6 Feet Deep

6 Feet Deep (also titled Niggamortis in some regions) is the debut album of the American hip hop supergroup Gravediggaz. Formed by former Tommy Boy Records artists Prince Paul, RZA, Frukwan and Poetic, the group utilized horror-themed imagery and lyrics combined with black comedy and satire to vent their frustrations with the hip hop record industry. The album's concept satirizes the hardcore hip hop and gangsta rap of the early 1990s. Released on August 9, 1994, by Gee Street Records, the album helped usher in horrorcore.

6 Feet Deep
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 9, 1994
Recorded1991–1994[1]
GenreHorrorcore
Length55:53
Label
Producer
Gravediggaz chronology
6 Feet Deep
(1994)
The Hell E.P.
(1995)
Singles from 6 Feet Deep
  1. "Diary of a Madman"
    Released: June 21, 1994
  2. "Nowhere to Run, Nowhere to Hide"
    Released: September 6, 1994
  3. "1-800 Suicide"
    Released: January 24, 1995

Production edit

The conception of the Gravediggaz group came at a low point in the careers of each of the group's members, each of which had at one point or another been signed to Tommy Boy Records and had not had good experiences with the label. Prince Paul had also contributed drums to the RZA's early single "Ooh We Love You Rakeem".[1][2] According to Paul, the RZA was trying to get signed to Doo Dew Man Records, Paul's vanity label distributed by Def Jam Records,[1] but Paul had failed to launch the label, and Def Jam put Resident Alien's It Takes a Nation of Suckers to Hold Us In, the label's lone album, on hold.[2] Additionally, Paul and rapper Frukwan had both recently left Stetsasonic, and while Paul had received much praise for his instrumentals for De La Soul's acclaimed debut album, 3 Feet High and Rising, the group's follow-up album De La Soul is Dead was not well received, and De La Soul were beginning to handle more of their own production, alienating Paul from the group and leaving him in a "dark [and] depressed" mood, which was reflected in the instrumentals he was creating at this time.[1][2][3] Paul called rappers RZA, Frukwan, and Poetic separately, inviting them to listen to these new instrumentals in his home, and RZA suggested that they form a group together and proposed they name it Gravediggaz, which met with the approval of the four, who each took on "grave-themed" aliases - the Undertaker (Prince Paul), the Grym Reaper (Poetic), the Gatekeeper (Frukwan) and the RZArector - and recorded the demo "The House That Hatred Built".[1][3] The formation of the Gravediggaz made the group one of hip hop's first supergroups.[3]

The demo was shopped to Def Jam and Jive Records, who both passed on the group. Subsequently, Poetic began working at a bagel factory, Frukwan got a job making clothes, and the RZA co-founded the Wu-Tang Clan, which Paul later observed had been influenced by the Gravediggaz' conceptualization as a concept-oriented rap supergroup.[1][3] Eazy-E offered the Gravediggaz a contract with Ruthless Records, but Paul turned it down due to Jerry Heller's contract, which Paul described as "one of the worst [contracts] I’ve ever seen in my life."[3] Several years after the demo was recorded, Gee Street Records offered a better contract, and subsequently signed the group.[1] "Constant Elevation" was the first song recorded by the group after signing with Gee Street. Poetic rewrote his intro verse after some bad takes, establishing the energy that would carry over to the rest of the album's vocal sessions.[2] RZA intended to record "Nowhere to Run, Nowhere to Hide" as a solo track, but Prince Paul recorded additional verses from Frukwan and Poetic.[2]

Composition edit

Gravediggaz was one of the first rap groups in the subgenre horrorcore, which The Quietus writer David Bennun described as "a then novel means of addressing black life at street level [and] finding a new way of getting that message across".[3] Q magazine said that the Gravediggaz "use death, burial and The Grim Reaper as central themes for a chilling mid-tempo stomp through America's urban problems."[4] Bennun connects Gravediggaz' lyrics not only to the hardcore rap lyrics of the Geto Boys and Cypress Hill, but also to EC Comics' Tales From The Crypt.[3] According to John-Michael Bond in his review for Rap Reviews, the album's unifying theme is hate, which Gravediggaz use as "a metaphor for murdering the mindless drivel that infected early '90s rap".[5] Hip hop at this time had shifted towards violent gangsta rap, due to the popularity of N.W.A and Ruthless Records, and the lyrical content of early-90s rap acts was seen as "vying to outdo the last for cold-blooded gruesomeness, justified on the grounds that it was simply portraying life as it is on the street", according to Bennun.[3] In contrast to the serious-toned violent threats of hardcore rap, the Gravediggaz' lyrics combine horror themes with black comedy and satire, exemplified by the album's original title, Niggamortis.[3] According to Bond, "Gravediggaz were born out of a disdain and hatred for the bullshit that surrounded four men whose talents were under represented at the time and set out to make the most uncompromising music possible." Bond compares 6 Feet Deep to social horror films like The Last House on the Left and Dawn of the Dead.[5] Gravediggaz also drew inspiration from the lyrical themes and imagery of heavy metal music.[3] "Diary of a Madman" uses imagery from the crucifixion of Jesus in RZA's verse.[2] Despite the group intending the lyrics of "1-800 Suicide", which appear to encourage suicide, as dark humor, high scrutiny of rap lyrics at this time meant that the Gravediggaz had to record an alternate lyric version as an anti-suicide PSA.[2]

Most of the album's instrumentals were created by Prince Paul. According to Rolling Stone, Paul's production "[evokes] the atmosphere of horror movies and ominous effects".[6] The piano loop of "Constant Elevation" was sampled from Allen Toussaint's "Louie".[2] "Nowhere to Run, Nowhere to Hide" samples Eugene McDaniels "Jagger’s Dagger".[2] "Defective Trip (Trippin')" utilizes psychedelic rock electric guitar playing.[3] It samples John Ussery's "Listen to the Melody" and Alvin Cash's "Twine Time".[7] "2 Cups of Blood" samples it's keyboard loop from Larry Willis' "Inner Crisis."[2] "Blood Brothers" does not utilize any samples.[7] Paul's instrumental for "Bang Your Head" was originally created for the Cold Crush Four, but after the group rejected the instrumental, RZA proposed using it for the Gravediggaz.[7] "Diary of a Madman", one of the album's only tracks to feature an instrumental by the RZA, utilized a shelved instrumental demo intended for a Wu-Tang Clan song, sampling Johnny Mathis.[5] "1-800 Suicide" samples Booker T. & the M.G.'s "Sunny".[2] "Death Trap" samples the Whole Darn Family's "7 Minutes of Funk";[7] The song's lyrics refer to drug overdoses, murder and Lorena Bobbitt.[7]

Release and reception edit

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [8]
Entertainment WeeklyB[9]
NME4/5[10]
RapReviews9.5/10[5]
Robert Christgau  [11]
Rolling Stone     [6]
The Source3.5/5[12]
Spin Alternative Record Guide5/10[13]

The album was released on August 9, 1994.[2] It was released under the title Niggamortis outside of the United States.[8] Entertainment Weekly wrote that "the flustered beats, washed in minor chords, are strangely irresistible".[9] NME praised the album for "feverishly [documenting] the low life".[10] The magazine later ranked the album at #22 on their list of the "Top 50 Albums Of 1994".[14] In 2009, Fangoria named it as an iconic horrorcore album.[15]

Track listing edit

All tracks written by Anthony Berkeley, Robert Diggs, Arnold Hamilton and Paul Huston and produced by Prince Paul except where noted.

Side A
No.TitleProducer(s)Length
1."Just When You Thought It Was Over (Intro)" 0:10
2."Constant Elevation" 2:30
3."Nowhere to Run, Nowhere to Hide" 3:55
4."Defective Trip (Trippin')" 5:04
5."2 Cups of Blood" 1:24
6."Blood Brothers"Gatekeeper4:47
7."360 Questions" 0:33
8."1-800 Suicide" 4:14
European bonus track
No.TitleLength
9."Pass the Shovel"3:39
Side B
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Diary of a Madman" (featuring Shabazz the Disciple and Killah Priest)
  • RNS
  • RZA
  • Prince Paul
4:34
2."Mommy, What's a Gravedigga?"
 1:44
3."Bang Your Head"  3:24
4."Here Comes the Gravediggaz"
  • Berkeley
  • Diggs
  • Hamilton
  • Huston
  • Pedro Sime
Mr. Sime3:44
5."Graveyard Chamber" (featuring Dreddy Kruger, Scientific Shabazz and Killah Priest)
RZA4:57
6."Deathtrap"
  • Berkeley
  • Diggs
  • Hamilton
  • Huston
  • August Moon
  • Tyrone Thomas
 2:57
7."6 Feet Deep" 
  • RZA
  • Gravediggaz
4:36
8."Rest In Peace (Outro)"  2:01
Total length:55:53

Charts edit

Singles edit

Personnel edit

Credits adapted from AllMusic.[8]

Gravediggaz
  • The Undertaker - vocals, composer, arranger, associate producer, engineer, mixing, producer, score, scratching
  • RZArector - vocals, composer, mixing, producer
  • Grym Reaper - vocals, mixing
  • Gatekeeper - vocals, mixing, producer
Additional personnel
  • Eddie Berkeley - vocals
  • Carlos Bess - assistant engineer
  • Biz Markie - guest artist, vocals
  • Booker T. & the MG's - performer
  • Djinji Brown - vocals
  • D. Collins - composer
  • Craig G - guest artist
  • Chris Gehringer - engineer, mastering
  • Scott Harding - bass guitar, engineer, mixing, vocals
  • Hellrazor - vocals
  • Penelope Houston - composer
  • James Jackson - vocals
  • Just-Ice - performer
  • Killah Priest - vocals
  • KRS-One - performer
  • Kurious - guest artist, vocals
  • Leroy and the Drivers - performer, primary artist
  • Derrick Lovelace - vocals
  • Masta Ace - guest artist
  • MC Serch - guest artist, vocals
  • Eugene McDaniels - composer
  • Don McKenzie - vocals
  • Mr. Sime - mixing, producer, vocals, composer
  • Dennis Mitchell - assistant engineer
  • A. Moon - composer
  • Don Newkirk - keyboards
  • Waymon Reed - composer
  • Vernon Reid - guest artist, vocals
  • RNS - producer
  • Angela Rushen - composer
  • Patrice Rushen - composer
  • Ethan Ryman - engineer
  • Scientific Shabazz - vocals
  • Skiz - vocals
  • Jamey Staub - assistant engineer
  • Raquelle Stroud - vocals
  • T. Thomas - composer
  • Allen Toussaint - performer
  • John Ussery - performer
  • Franz Verna - assistant engineer
  • The Whole Darn Family - performer
  • Wildman Steve - vocals
  • Tracey Amier Witherspoon - vocals

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Prince Paul Reveals Gravediggaz Recordings Predate Enter The Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)". Ambrosia for Heads. Retrieved August 10, 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Ducker, Jesse (August 7, 2019). "Gravediggaz' Debut Album '6 Feet Deep' Turns 25". Albumism. Retrieved 2022-09-25.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Bennun, David (July 29, 2019). "Death Was Not The End: Gravediggaz' 6 Feet Deep Revisited". The Quietus. Retrieved 2022-09-24.
  4. ^ "Gravediggaz - 6 Feet Review". Q: 129. November 1994.
  5. ^ a b c d Bond, John-Michael (2011). "Gravediggaz :: 6 Feet Deep :: Gee Street/Island/PolyGram Records". RapReviews. Retrieved June 29, 2011.
  6. ^ a b "Gravediggaz - 6 Feet Review". Rolling Stone. October 6, 1994. p. 90.
  7. ^ a b c d e Preezy (August 9, 2014). "Five Best Songs From Gravediggaz's '6 Feet Deep' Album". The Boombox. Retrieved 2022-09-24.
  8. ^ a b c Swihart, Stanton (2011). "6 Feet Deep – Gravediggaz | AllMusic". allmusic.com. Retrieved June 29, 2011.
  9. ^ a b "Gravediggaz - 6 Feet Review". Entertainment Weekly. August 19, 1994. p. 62.
  10. ^ a b "Gravediggaz - 6 Feet Review". NME: 46. September 10, 1994.
  11. ^ Christgau, Robert (2011). "Robert Christgau: CG: Gravediggaz". robertchristgau.com. from the original on June 6, 2011. Retrieved June 29, 2011.
  12. ^ J the Sultan (September 1994). "Record Report: Gravediggaz – 6 Feet Deep". The Source. No. 60. New York. pp. 91–92.
  13. ^ Aaron, Charles (1995). "Wu-Tang Clan". In Weisbard, Eric; Marks, Craig (eds.). Spin Alternative Record Guide. Vintage Books. pp. 437–438. ISBN 0-679-75574-8.
  14. ^ "Top 50 Albums Of 1994". NME: 22. December 24, 1994.
  15. ^ Molgaard, Matt (August 12, 2009). . Fangoria. Archived from the original on August 16, 2009. Retrieved August 19, 2009.
  16. ^ "Gravediggaz Chart History (Billboard 200)". Billboard. Retrieved October 26, 2020.
  17. ^ "Gravediggaz Chart History (Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums)". Billboard. Retrieved October 26, 2020.
  18. ^ "Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums – Year-End 1994". Billboard. Retrieved October 26, 2020.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h "Singles charts and awards for 6 Feet Deep". Allmusic. Retrieved March 28, 2008.

feet, deep, american, band, feet, deep, also, titled, niggamortis, some, regions, debut, album, american, supergroup, gravediggaz, formed, former, tommy, records, artists, prince, paul, frukwan, poetic, group, utilized, horror, themed, imagery, lyrics, combine. For the American band see Six Feet Deep 6 Feet Deep also titled Niggamortis in some regions is the debut album of the American hip hop supergroup Gravediggaz Formed by former Tommy Boy Records artists Prince Paul RZA Frukwan and Poetic the group utilized horror themed imagery and lyrics combined with black comedy and satire to vent their frustrations with the hip hop record industry The album s concept satirizes the hardcore hip hop and gangsta rap of the early 1990s Released on August 9 1994 by Gee Street Records the album helped usher in horrorcore 6 Feet DeepStudio album by GravediggazReleasedAugust 9 1994Recorded1991 1994 1 GenreHorrorcoreLength55 53LabelGee StreetIslandPolyGramProducerPrince PaulGatekeeperRNSRZAMr SimeGravediggazGravediggaz chronology6 Feet Deep 1994 The Hell E P 1995 Singles from 6 Feet Deep Diary of a Madman Released June 21 1994 Nowhere to Run Nowhere to Hide Released September 6 1994 1 800 Suicide Released January 24 1995 Contents 1 Production 2 Composition 3 Release and reception 4 Track listing 5 Charts 5 1 Weekly charts 5 2 Year end charts 5 3 Singles 6 Personnel 7 ReferencesProduction editThe conception of the Gravediggaz group came at a low point in the careers of each of the group s members each of which had at one point or another been signed to Tommy Boy Records and had not had good experiences with the label Prince Paul had also contributed drums to the RZA s early single Ooh We Love You Rakeem 1 2 According to Paul the RZA was trying to get signed to Doo Dew Man Records Paul s vanity label distributed by Def Jam Records 1 but Paul had failed to launch the label and Def Jam put Resident Alien s It Takes a Nation of Suckers to Hold Us In the label s lone album on hold 2 Additionally Paul and rapper Frukwan had both recently left Stetsasonic and while Paul had received much praise for his instrumentals for De La Soul s acclaimed debut album 3 Feet High and Rising the group s follow up album De La Soul is Dead was not well received and De La Soul were beginning to handle more of their own production alienating Paul from the group and leaving him in a dark and depressed mood which was reflected in the instrumentals he was creating at this time 1 2 3 Paul called rappers RZA Frukwan and Poetic separately inviting them to listen to these new instrumentals in his home and RZA suggested that they form a group together and proposed they name it Gravediggaz which met with the approval of the four who each took on grave themed aliases the Undertaker Prince Paul the Grym Reaper Poetic the Gatekeeper Frukwan and the RZArector and recorded the demo The House That Hatred Built 1 3 The formation of the Gravediggaz made the group one of hip hop s first supergroups 3 The demo was shopped to Def Jam and Jive Records who both passed on the group Subsequently Poetic began working at a bagel factory Frukwan got a job making clothes and the RZA co founded the Wu Tang Clan which Paul later observed had been influenced by the Gravediggaz conceptualization as a concept oriented rap supergroup 1 3 Eazy E offered the Gravediggaz a contract with Ruthless Records but Paul turned it down due to Jerry Heller s contract which Paul described as one of the worst contracts I ve ever seen in my life 3 Several years after the demo was recorded Gee Street Records offered a better contract and subsequently signed the group 1 Constant Elevation was the first song recorded by the group after signing with Gee Street Poetic rewrote his intro verse after some bad takes establishing the energy that would carry over to the rest of the album s vocal sessions 2 RZA intended to record Nowhere to Run Nowhere to Hide as a solo track but Prince Paul recorded additional verses from Frukwan and Poetic 2 Composition editGravediggaz was one of the first rap groups in the subgenre horrorcore which The Quietus writer David Bennun described as a then novel means of addressing black life at street level and finding a new way of getting that message across 3 Q magazine said that the Gravediggaz use death burial and The Grim Reaper as central themes for a chilling mid tempo stomp through America s urban problems 4 Bennun connects Gravediggaz lyrics not only to the hardcore rap lyrics of the Geto Boys and Cypress Hill but also to EC Comics Tales From The Crypt 3 According to John Michael Bond in his review for Rap Reviews the album s unifying theme is hate which Gravediggaz use as a metaphor for murdering the mindless drivel that infected early 90s rap 5 Hip hop at this time had shifted towards violent gangsta rap due to the popularity of N W A and Ruthless Records and the lyrical content of early 90s rap acts was seen as vying to outdo the last for cold blooded gruesomeness justified on the grounds that it was simply portraying life as it is on the street according to Bennun 3 In contrast to the serious toned violent threats of hardcore rap the Gravediggaz lyrics combine horror themes with black comedy and satire exemplified by the album s original title Niggamortis 3 According to Bond Gravediggaz were born out of a disdain and hatred for the bullshit that surrounded four men whose talents were under represented at the time and set out to make the most uncompromising music possible Bond compares 6 Feet Deep to social horror films like The Last House on the Left and Dawn of the Dead 5 Gravediggaz also drew inspiration from the lyrical themes and imagery of heavy metal music 3 Diary of a Madman uses imagery from the crucifixion of Jesus in RZA s verse 2 Despite the group intending the lyrics of 1 800 Suicide which appear to encourage suicide as dark humor high scrutiny of rap lyrics at this time meant that the Gravediggaz had to record an alternate lyric version as an anti suicide PSA 2 Most of the album s instrumentals were created by Prince Paul According to Rolling Stone Paul s production evokes the atmosphere of horror movies and ominous effects 6 The piano loop of Constant Elevation was sampled from Allen Toussaint s Louie 2 Nowhere to Run Nowhere to Hide samples Eugene McDaniels Jagger s Dagger 2 Defective Trip Trippin utilizes psychedelic rock electric guitar playing 3 It samples John Ussery s Listen to the Melody and Alvin Cash s Twine Time 7 2 Cups of Blood samples it s keyboard loop from Larry Willis Inner Crisis 2 Blood Brothers does not utilize any samples 7 Paul s instrumental for Bang Your Head was originally created for the Cold Crush Four but after the group rejected the instrumental RZA proposed using it for the Gravediggaz 7 Diary of a Madman one of the album s only tracks to feature an instrumental by the RZA utilized a shelved instrumental demo intended for a Wu Tang Clan song sampling Johnny Mathis 5 1 800 Suicide samples Booker T amp the M G s Sunny 2 Death Trap samples the Whole Darn Family s 7 Minutes of Funk 7 The song s lyrics refer to drug overdoses murder and Lorena Bobbitt 7 Release and reception editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2022 Professional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllMusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 8 Entertainment WeeklyB 9 NME4 5 10 RapReviews9 5 10 5 Robert Christgau nbsp nbsp 11 Rolling Stone nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 6 The Source3 5 5 12 Spin Alternative Record Guide5 10 13 The album was released on August 9 1994 2 It was released under the title Niggamortis outside of the United States 8 Entertainment Weekly wrote that the flustered beats washed in minor chords are strangely irresistible 9 NME praised the album for feverishly documenting the low life 10 The magazine later ranked the album at 22 on their list of the Top 50 Albums Of 1994 14 In 2009 Fangoria named it as an iconic horrorcore album 15 Track listing editAll tracks written by Anthony Berkeley Robert Diggs Arnold Hamilton and Paul Huston and produced by Prince Paul except where noted Side ANo TitleProducer s Length1 Just When You Thought It Was Over Intro 0 102 Constant Elevation 2 303 Nowhere to Run Nowhere to Hide 3 554 Defective Trip Trippin 5 045 2 Cups of Blood 1 246 Blood Brothers Gatekeeper4 477 360 Questions 0 338 1 800 Suicide 4 14 European bonus trackNo TitleLength9 Pass the Shovel 3 39 Side BNo TitleWriter s Producer s Length1 Diary of a Madman featuring Shabazz the Disciple and Killah Priest Anthony BerkeleyRobert DiggsArnold HamiltonPaul HustonDavid CollinsWalter ReedRNSRZAPrince Paul4 342 Mommy What s a Gravedigga BerkeleyDiggsHamiltonHustonPatrice RushenAngela Rushen 1 443 Bang Your Head 3 244 Here Comes the Gravediggaz BerkeleyDiggsHamiltonHustonPedro SimeMr Sime3 445 Graveyard Chamber featuring Dreddy Kruger Scientific Shabazz and Killah Priest BerkeleyDiggsHamiltonHustonCollinsReedJames DockeryRZA4 576 Deathtrap BerkeleyDiggsHamiltonHustonAugust MoonTyrone Thomas 2 577 6 Feet Deep RZAGravediggaz4 368 Rest In Peace Outro 2 01Total length 55 53Charts editWeekly charts edit Chart 1994 Peak position US Billboard 200 16 36 US Top R amp B Hip Hop Albums Billboard 17 6 Year end charts edit Chart 1994 Position US Top R amp B Hip Hop Albums Billboard 18 100 Singles edit Year Album Peakposition Billboard Hot 100 Hot R amp B Hip Hop Singles amp Tracks Hot Rap Singles Hot Dance Music Maxi Singles Sales 1994 Diary of a Mad Man 82 19 57 19 8 19 11 19 Nowhere to Run Nowhere to Hide 32 19 27 19 1995 1 800 Suicide 46 19 29 19 Personnel editCredits adapted from AllMusic 8 Gravediggaz The Undertaker vocals composer arranger associate producer engineer mixing producer score scratching RZArector vocals composer mixing producer Grym Reaper vocals mixing Gatekeeper vocals mixing producer Additional personnel Eddie Berkeley vocals Carlos Bess assistant engineer Biz Markie guest artist vocals Booker T amp the MG s performer Djinji Brown vocals D Collins composer Craig G guest artist Chris Gehringer engineer mastering Scott Harding bass guitar engineer mixing vocals Hellrazor vocals Penelope Houston composer James Jackson vocals Just Ice performer Killah Priest vocals KRS One performer Kurious guest artist vocals Leroy and the Drivers performer primary artist Derrick Lovelace vocals Masta Ace guest artist MC Serch guest artist vocals Eugene McDaniels composer Don McKenzie vocals Mr Sime mixing producer vocals composer Dennis Mitchell assistant engineer A Moon composer Don Newkirk keyboards Waymon Reed composer Vernon Reid guest artist vocals RNS producer Angela Rushen composer Patrice Rushen composer Ethan Ryman engineer Scientific Shabazz vocals Skiz vocals Jamey Staub assistant engineer Raquelle Stroud vocals T Thomas composer Allen Toussaint performer John Ussery performer Franz Verna assistant engineer The Whole Darn Family performer Wildman Steve vocals Tracey Amier Witherspoon vocalsReferences edit a b c d e f g Prince Paul Reveals Gravediggaz Recordings Predate Enter The Wu Tang 36 Chambers Ambrosia for Heads Retrieved August 10 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l Ducker Jesse August 7 2019 Gravediggaz Debut Album 6 Feet Deep Turns 25 Albumism Retrieved 2022 09 25 a b c d e f g h i j k Bennun David July 29 2019 Death Was Not The End Gravediggaz 6 Feet Deep Revisited The Quietus Retrieved 2022 09 24 Gravediggaz 6 Feet Review Q 129 November 1994 a b c d Bond John Michael 2011 Gravediggaz 6 Feet Deep Gee Street Island PolyGram Records RapReviews Retrieved June 29 2011 a b Gravediggaz 6 Feet Review Rolling Stone October 6 1994 p 90 a b c d e Preezy August 9 2014 Five Best Songs From Gravediggaz s 6 Feet Deep Album The Boombox Retrieved 2022 09 24 a b c Swihart Stanton 2011 6 Feet Deep Gravediggaz AllMusic allmusic com Retrieved June 29 2011 a b Gravediggaz 6 Feet Review Entertainment Weekly August 19 1994 p 62 a b Gravediggaz 6 Feet Review NME 46 September 10 1994 Christgau Robert 2011 Robert Christgau CG Gravediggaz robertchristgau com Archived from the original on June 6 2011 Retrieved June 29 2011 J the Sultan September 1994 Record Report Gravediggaz 6 Feet Deep The Source No 60 New York pp 91 92 Aaron Charles 1995 Wu Tang Clan In Weisbard Eric Marks Craig eds Spin Alternative Record Guide Vintage Books pp 437 438 ISBN 0 679 75574 8 Top 50 Albums Of 1994 NME 22 December 24 1994 Molgaard Matt August 12 2009 Rapped and Tagged Horrorcore s Iconic Albums Fangoria Archived from the original on August 16 2009 Retrieved August 19 2009 Gravediggaz Chart History Billboard 200 Billboard Retrieved October 26 2020 Gravediggaz Chart History Top R amp B Hip Hop Albums Billboard Retrieved October 26 2020 Top R amp B Hip Hop Albums Year End 1994 Billboard Retrieved October 26 2020 a b c d e f g h Singles charts and awards for 6 Feet Deep Allmusic Retrieved March 28 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 6 Feet Deep amp oldid 1213370838, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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