Bone Thugs-N-Harmony - The Collection: Volume One. It's just hard to discern that for certain in this guise. Publication date 1998 Usage Public Domain Mark 1.0 Topics hip-hop rap urban Language English. Krayzie tries to keep it interesting by varying the flow, never putting too many similar tracks next to each other, but who the hell can make it through 38 tracks of this without a breather, even if some cuts are skits? It may be a cliche to say that this double-record would have been much more potent if it was trimmed to a single disc, but that doesn't make it less true, especially since there are enough songs to make a very good record, possibly one of the best things Krayzie has been involved with. Even though there is more depth than there was on The Art of War, there's a whole lot of filler cluttering these two discs, including several tracks that feel as if they're designed to launch developing artists. A lot more of it: 38 tracks, to be precise. In fact, other than the occasional cut that veers toward urban territory, there isn't a whole lot to differentiate this from the average Bone release - there's just more of it. Some of these cuts are positively smoove, which stands in direct contrast to the gangstafied lyrics, but that's always been a part of the Bone trademark. Freed from the group setting but not necessarily the members - who fill some of the obligatory guest slots, along with Bone family members such as Relay - Krayzie doesn't hesitate to accentuate the already smooth surfaces of his music. Nowhere was that more true than Bone Thugs-N-Harmony's overwrought third album, The Art of War and, unfortunately, that same sense of hubris characterizes Thug Mentality 1999, the ridiculously inflated debut solo album from Krayzie Bone. That same year - in the same week, no less - Krayzie released Thug Brothers 2, a collaboration with Young Noble of the Outlawz, as well as his sixth mixtape, Eternal Legend.Theoretically, an epic hip-hop album could be compelling, but almost of all of the sweepstake entries are tedious, serving to diminish the artist's music instead of enhancing it. In 2017, he teamed up with Bizzy Bone for New Waves, which they issued as an official Bone Thugs-N-Harmony album. Krayzie finally returned to his solo career in 2015 with Chasing the Devil, an album released by the eOne label.
A year later he was featured on the Grammy Award-winning song "Ridin'" by Chamillionaire, while that year's Bone Thugs-N-Harmony album, Thug Stories, launched a steady stream of releases - and supporting tours - from the group.
Evil, was originally slated for a 2004 release but was delayed until early 2005 when Krayzie got to the opportunity to record some tracks for the album with his old crew members Wish Bone and Bizzy Bone. Inner demons and life on the street were the main topics of 2001's Thug on da Line. Subsequent LPs, including 1995's E 1999 Eternal and 1997's The Art of War, launched the group to rap superstardom, and as the decade drew to a close, Krayzie Bone issued his solo debut, Thug Mentality 1999. It was released on Apon Mo Thugs Records, Ruthless Records, and Relativity Records. A member of Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, rapper Krayzie Bone was born Anthony Henderson in Cleveland, Ohio also known as LeathaFace, The Sawed-Off Gangsta, he joined Bone Thugs-N-Harmony in 1993, debuting a year later with the EP Creepin on Ah Come Up. Thug Mentality 1999 is Krayzie Bone’s first solo album.