Servants in Heaven, Kings in Hell | ||||||||||
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Studio album by Jedi Mind Tricks | ||||||||||
Released | September 19, 2006 | |||||||||
Recorded | 2005–2006 | |||||||||
Genre | East Coast hip hop, underground hip hop, Horrorcore | |||||||||
Label | Babygrande | |||||||||
Producer | Stoupe the Enemy of Mankind | |||||||||
Jedi Mind Tricks chronology | ||||||||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
AllHipHop | |
Allmusic | |
HipHopDX | |
Hip-Hop Linguistics | |
MVRemix | (8/10) |
Prefix Magazine | (7/10) |
RapReviews | (8.5/10) |
HipHopSite.com | (4/5) |
Servants in Heaven, Kings in Hell is the fifth studio album by hip hop group Jedi Mind Tricks. It was released September 19, 2006 through Babygrande Records. The first single, "Heavy Metal Kings", featuring Ill Bill of La Coka Nostra, was released in early August through iTunes and a limited edition vinyl pressing. Additional guest appearances on the album are provided by Shara Worden of My Brightest Diamond, Sean Price, R.A. the Rugged Man, Block McCloud and Army of the Pharaohs members Chief Kamachi and Reef the Lost Cauze.
As with previous Jedi Mind Tricks albums, many of the track titles appear to be lifted from previous songs by heavy metal groups. For example, "When All Light Dies" was previously the title of a song by Trivium; "Serenity in Murder" is also the name of a Slayer track; "Razorblade Salvation" is also a song by Sinergy; and "Black Winter Day" is the name of a track by Amorphis. The album title, as well, could potentially be a reference to the Kreator track "Servant in Heaven (King in Hell)" from their Violent Revolution album. Much of the lyrics reference heavy metal also, i.e. "I'm a Cannibal Corpse" (When All Light Dies) and "Calculate infinity with The Dillinger Escape Plan." (Serenity In Murder).
Servants in Heaven became the group's most commercially successful release, being their first album to break into the Billboard 200, and also landed in the top ten on the Independent Albums chart, and the top fifty on the Top R&B/Hip Hop Albums chart. The album was warmly received critically, especially when compared to their two previous efforts, Visions of Gandhi and Legacy of Blood, which both received mixed reviews. Allmusic gave the album a positive four star rating; writer Marisa Brown stated: