Details

Track Listing 1. Intro 2. Searchin' 4 Peace - (with Poetic Hustla'z) 3. Ghetto Bluez - (with II Tru/Layzie Bone) 4. Killing Fields - (with Graveyard Shift) 5. Mo' Murder - (with Krayzie Bone) 6. Ain't No Reason - (with Ken Dawg) 7. Take Your Time - (with Tre/Krayzie Bone) 8. Welcome to My World - (with II Tru/Ken Dawg) 9. Thug Devotion - (featuring Layzie Bone/Krayzie Bone/Tre/Ken Dawg/Souljah Boy) 10. Here With Me - (with Tre) 11. Playa in Me - (with Ken Dawg) 12. No Pretender - (featuring Jhaz/Tombstone/Boogy Nikke/Krayzie Bone) 13. Rumors & War - (with Graveyard Shift/Flesh-N-Bone) 14. II Tru - (with II Tru) 15. Low Down - (with Souljah Boy/Krayzie Bone) 16. Family Scriptures - (featuring Graveyard Shift/Poetic Hustla'z/II Tru/Ken Dawg/Souljah Boy/Flesh-N-Bone/Tre/K. Bone/L. Bone)
| Details | | Contributing artists: | Boogy Nikke, Flesh-N-Bone, Graveyard Shift, II Tru, Jhaz, K. Bone, Ken Dawg, Krayzie Bone, L. Bone, Layzie Bone, Poetic Hustla'z, Souljah Boy, Tombstone, Tre | | Distributor: | RED Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes MO THUGS FAMILY SCRIPTURES is the first release on Bone Thugs-N-Harmony's record label, Mo' Thugs. It features members of Bone Thugs performing with each of the label's artists. Producers: Anthony Henderson, Archie Blaine, Bobby Jones, Paul O'Neil. Engineers include: Brian K. Nutter, Bobby Jones, Jeff Shirley.
Industry Reviews 4 Mics - Slammin' - ...Even though Layzie and Krayzie bless eight of the album's 17 tracks with ill poetics, the Mo Thugs family carry their own weight on several solo joints, exhibiting great diversity in music and rhyme style... The Source (12/01/1996)
...the album hits with an array of talent ranging from the rugged and eerie to soulful rhythm-and-blues melodies....MO THUGS FAMILY SCRIPTURES can be chalked up as another success for Bone... Rap Pages (02/01/1997)
...the uncharacteristically textured production, featuring mournful wah-wah guitar and wailing sax...powerfully echo the lyrics' inner-city blues. - Rating: A- Entertainment Weekly (11/29/1996)
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