Fort Minor - The Rising Tied -deluxe Version- -2005- Itunes -
The real charm here is the time capsule. The Deluxe Version (2005, iTunes exclusive) gave you the video for "Petrified" (remember the chess pieces?) and a few bonus cuts, but more importantly, it framed the album as a statement . You’d sync your white iPod, click that shiny digital wheel, and suddenly Shinoda wasn’t rapping about teenage angst—he was dissecting class warfare, ego death, and immigrant identity.
Here’s an interesting, critical-yet-appreciative review of , written as if for a blog or retrospective music site. Title: The One That Got Away: Why Fort Minor’s ‘The Rising Tied’ is Still Mike Shinoda’s Sharpest Knife Fort Minor - The Rising Tied -Deluxe Version- -2005- Itunes
No Chester Bennington. No screaming. No guitars until the very end ("Slip Out the Back"). Shinoda bet his credibility that he could stand next to Styles of Beyond, John Legend (on the stunning "High Road"), and Common without a rock safety net. And he won. The real charm here is the time capsule
Let’s get the obvious out of the way: In 2005, nobody expected the guy from Linkin Park to drop a backpack rap album. Not a nu-metal hybrid. Not a rock-rap curiosity. A straight-up, boom-bap, lyric-obsessed hip-hop record produced almost entirely by Mike Shinoda (and one Jay-Z track). No guitars until the very end ("Slip Out the Back")
★★★★☆ (4/5) Essential for: fans of underground hip-hop, political storytelling, and anyone who ever burned a CD for their car in 2006.
And yet, The Rising Tied remains the most unfairly slept-on major label rap debut of the mid-2000s.