Olive Branch - Locksmith

Olive Branch

Locksmith

  • Genre: Hip-Hop/Rap
  • Release Date: 2017-03-31
  • Explicitness: explicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 13
  • Album Price: 7.99
  • ℗ 2017 Landmark Entertainment
Listen on Apple Music

Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
The Calling Locksmith 1:11
2
Nobody Locksmith 5:13
3
No Way (feat. Rebecca Nobel) Locksmith 5:10
4
Agenda Locksmith 2:38
5
The Margin (feat. One Coco) Locksmith 3:34
6
The One (feat. Olamide Faison) Locksmith 4:07
7
Home (feat. Rebecca Nobel) Locksmith 5:00
8
Sanity Locksmith 3:43
9
Helpless (feat. Olamide Faison Locksmith 3:40
10
One More Time (feat. Sangin Sa Locksmith 4:24
11
Neck Pillow (feat. Rebecca Nob Locksmith 3:16
12
Olive Branch Locksmith 4:05
13
Home (feat. Rebecca Nobel) Locksmith 5:12

Reviews

  • Fresh Air

    5
    By CharmCity3535
    Great Album. Well thought out rhymes
  • ✨🔥✨

    5
    By TheDynamicNova
    Killin it
  • A Work of Art

    5
    By sportyspice11
    This album is a work of art. From start to finish, every single track. Consciousness and lyrical genius.
  • M.I.R.O.A.T

    5
    By KianLA24
    Most important rapper of all time! Needed some real ish
  • 5 ⭐️ Music Right Here!!!

    5
    By J-Roo7_9
    One of the real MC today. I been following Locksmith for a while now and I haven't heard a wack album yet.
  • Olive branch worth the wait

    5
    By Yesicash
    Straight fire too deep for weak minds
  • Great as Always

    5
    By Rifts605
    Locksmith killed it once again. I've been listening to him for years, and this is one of his best works to date!
  • Olive Branch, will plant a seed in you're brain

    5
    By Jmacish
    Locksmith is incredible, straight purity. Locksmith is one of a kind. Love the album, quite possibly the best album I have heard this year thus far....favorite track is home(Live) them live instruments just sound great. Rebecca Nobel did a fantastic job. The type of album where u let it play through from the Intro. #OliveBranch
  • Locksmith will blow you away with peace in 'Olive Branch'

    5
    By Alex Dionisio
    True enough, Richmond, California emcee Locksmith (Davood Asgari, formerly of Frontline duo) has come through on his promise to release his third studio album Olive Branch, and in timely fashion at that. Olive Branch was promoted briefly on Lock’s masterful 2016 mixtape The Lock Sessions but what’s better is that the LP is every bit as outstanding as fans had hoped it would be. Everywhere here the fierce, respected lyricist has an extraordinary sense of manhood and social responsibility and strong-willed moral character. His messages alone blow out at least three quarters of the mainstream rap field easily and when you add his top notch rhyme flow to the equation, he automatically moves to the upper echelon of hip-hop music. Also, new and returning guest artists and variably textured beats are in store for listeners old and new in what should prove to be Locksmith’s greatest album yet. The whole idea of the project is to impart critical words of wisdom. There are few breaks from it, but it’s also impossible to tire from it. Spoken word advice atop leads to thoughts on arriving plus toughness in the Kato-produced “Nobody,” which opens for some softer focused lessons-to-carry via “No Way” before Lock’s beast-slaying “Agenda” wakes us up like a bucket of ice cold water to a fast asleep face. Make note of the Tribe “Kick It” quote there and especially the line “’til we see ourselves as one we can never progress.” Next we have “The Margin,” Lock’s special attention to hurting people drowning in a decadent society and a call to think about how we are all connected in this world. Similarly yet some four tracks down, in “Helpless,” Locksmith again touches on our disconnectedness as people. “Home,” with returning Lock music-mate Rebecca Nobel, in her second of three appearances, tells us to be ourselves in the face of resistance, focuses on individual strengths over weaknesses and helps to shed our fears of being perceived poorly by others. Still, great feelings of love pervade the entire LP and in a few tracks most particularly. In “The One” Locksmith is concerned about struggling to make it work in a relationship enough to voice it (with fine eloquence), and later reconnects with his love in a spell of passion through “Neck Pillow,” which flips the melody and chorus of the Aaliyah tribute song “Miss You” (2002). Much as how “Go There” from Lock Sessions uplifted his and all mothers in general, this set’s “One More Time” immortalizes Lock’s passed mom with so much heart but mournfully this round, dropping the upbeat clip of “Go There” for a slower more soulful style. The title tracks ends the project here, save for the live version of “Home,” which is just as welcomed and really drives home (pun intended) its many valuable points even further. “Olive Branch” the song sees Lock comment with humble conviction on holding onto his integrity and dignity, and that’s basically what the whole of the album does in one way or another. This is not the same Locksmith of two or three years ago. This is a better Locksmith. The work he’s put in since has delivered him great credibility and proven his confidence in spreading sense, intelligence and reason through his bars. For all those “tough” guys and girls listening out there, know this – the Olive Branch LP is mellifluously inspirational at times but it is incredibly powerful and heavy in subject matter, enough to instantly knock down the cold hardened persona of anyone willing to look at it.
  • Album of the year!!!

    5
    By Thearsonisticgod_9
    The production is absolutely fantastic. Locksmith spits so real on this one. My favorite tracks are Sanity,Home,and Nobody

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