The Last Days of Oakland

The Last Days of Oakland
A drawing of Fantastic Negrito holding a guitar and sitting on a street sign at the corner of San Pablo and 32nd in Oakland
Studio album by Fantastic Negrito
Released June 3, 2016 (2016-06-03)
Genre Blues rock
Length 43:00
Label Blackball Universe
Producer Fantastic Negrito
Fantastic Negrito chronology
Fantastic Negrito
(2014)Fantastic Negrito2014
The Last Days of Oakland
(2016)

The Last Days of Oakland is an album by Fantastic Negrito. Rayanne Pinna described the album as "an urgent, political record that grapples with the many changes Oakland has seen in recent years."[1] In 2017, it won a Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Blues Album.[2]

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic(81%)[3]
Review scores
SourceRating
The Times[4]
AllMusic[5]
The Guardian[6]
Noisey[7]

Track listing

All songs written by Fantastic Negrito, except "In the Pines" by Lead Belly.

  1. "The Last Days of Oakland (Intro)" – 0:35
  2. "Working Poor" – 4:00
  3. "About a Bird" – 3:39
  4. "Scary Woman" – 3:10
  5. "What Would You Do? (Interlude 1)" – 1:19
  6. "The Nigga Song" – 3:16
  7. "In the Pines" – 4:19
  8. "Hump Through the Winter" – 3:54
  9. "Lost in a Crowd" – 5:00
  10. "El Chileno (Interlude 2)" – 0:41
  11. "The Worst" – 3:51
  12. "Rant Rushmore" – 5:01
  13. "Nothing Without You" – 4:15

References

  1. Piana, Rayanne (2016-06-21). "Fantastic Negrito is Cautiously Optimistic in 'The Last Days of Oakland'". East Bay Express. Retrieved 2017-01-26.
  2. Pereira, Alyssa (12 February 2017). "Fantastic Negrito wins first Grammy for Best Contemporary Blues album". San Francisco Chronicle.
  3. "The Last Days of Oakland". Metacritic. Retrieved 2017-01-26.
  4. Hodgkinson, Will (2016-06-17). "Fantastic Negrito: The Last Days Of Oakland". The Times. Retrieved 2017-01-26.
  5. Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "The Last Days of Oakland". AllMusic. Retrieved 2017-01-26.
  6. Hann, Michael (2016-06-16). "Fantastic Negrito: The Last Days of Oakland review – a bluesy howl for modern America". The Guardian. Retrieved 2017-01-26.
  7. Christgau, Robert (2017-01-13). "With 'RTJ3,' Run the Jewels Are Funnier, Hookier, Brainier, and More Political". Noisey. Vice. Retrieved 2017-01-26.


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