Don't Quit Your Day Job (2007)

Artist: Consequence
Currently Unavailable: This item is currently unavailable from the Manufacturer.
Format:  CD
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Product Summary
Label: GOOD MUSIC/RED
UPC: 00828768963128
Release Date: 3/6/2007
Buy.com Sku: 204055698
Item#: M3GHHT
Format:  CD

Song Listing

Disc 1
Song TitleSample
1. Job Song ~ Consequence (Rap)
2. Don't Forget Em ~ Consequence (Rap)
3. Uptown ~ Consequence (Rap)
4. Good, The Bad, The Ugly, The - (with Kanye West) ~ Consequence (Rap)
5. Night Night ~ Consequence (Rap)
6. Pretty Little Sexy Mama ~ Consequence (Rap)
7. On Break - (skit) ~ Consequence (Rap)
8. Feel This Way - (with John Legend) ~ Consequence (Rap)
9. Callin' Me ~ Consequence (Rap)
10. Disperse - (with Gangsta L. Crisis/Really) ~ Consequence (Rap)
11. Yo Dex! - (skit) ~ Consequence (Rap)
12. Uncle Rahiem ~ Consequence (Rap)
13. Grammy Family - (with Kanye West/John Legend/DJ Khaled) ~ Consequence (Rap)
14. Good News, Bad News ~ Consequence (Rap)
15. Who Knew My Luck Would Change ~ Consequence (Rap)



 
Album Notes and Credits

Notes & Personnel Info
Personnel: Tony Williams (vocals).
Audio Mixers: Andrew Dawson; Ken Ifill.
Recording information: Chung King Studios, New York, NY; Da Edge Of Madness Studio, Cambria Heights, NY; SoundEQ, Sony Studios, New York, NY.
Illustrator: Jean Labourdette "Turf One".
Photographer: Nabil Elderkin.
After years of issuing underappreciated recordings, New York City-based rapper Consequence (born Dexter Raymond Mills, Jr.) finally got a shot at the big time with 2007's DON"T QUIT YOUR DAY JOB. Presented in part by 'Quence's old friend Kanye West, the album showcases his amiable, easy-going take on hip-hop, which is best embodied by "The Good, the Bad, the Ugly," a fast-flowing track that features West, and the soulful John Legend collaboration "Feel This Way."
It is no coincidence that Consequence is signed to Kanye West's G.O.O.D. Music. Not only does the latter appear twice on Don't Quit Your Day Job, Kanye also hosted the Queens rapper's mixtape Take 'Em to the Cleaners and invited him to appear on his own album, The College Dropout. All this friendly cooperation is probably helped by the fact that both MCs share a love for clean, mellow, soul-sample-based production, have strikingly similar delivery styles -- often rhyming words with themselves in a voice that's closer to speaking than rapping -- and choose to write about similar topics. But Consequence isn't some neophyte MC who West has taken on as a prot?g?. He made his debut in 1996 on A Tribe Called Quest's record Beats, Rhymes and Life, and, while his career since then has not been overly active, he has kept a hand in music the entire time. But perhaps because it took him more than a decade since that appearance, Quence chose to approach his first actual solo album from the perspective of a kid just starting out in the game. He begins Don't Quit Your Day Job with a song/skit about being behind on bills and having to put his "pride to the side/Go get a 9 to 5" and ends it with deciding to focus all his time and energy on music instead (having to deal with a nagging mother throughout). The rest of the record moves from tracks about trying to make it big, or at least make it ("Don't Forget Em") to women ("Feel This Way") to general observations on life ("The Good, the Bad, the Ugly"). It's all very relatable; Consequence isn't trying to present himself as anything more than just a regular guy, in the same way Kanye has, and it's apparent. This means that even in songs like "Pretty Little Sexy Mama," where he uses fairy tale imagery throughout ("I make a damsel-in-distress dismantle her dress/And once you meet me past the guards I can handle the rest/I got a plan for the stress in these evil times/So I keep on body armor like it's Medieval Times"), it seems natural and real, the MC's slightly lisped voice ably keeping time and cadence well. In fact, it's in pieces like "Night Night," in which he warns he'll fight if he needs to, that things come across a little forced. It's as if he feels he has to prove his street cred when his talent -- part old-school, part backpacker -- is imposing enough, appealing in its intelligence and uniqueness; he doesn't have to slip into stereotypes to show he's a real rapper, he can let his rhymes speak for themselves. ~ Marisa Brown
It is no coincidence that Consequence is signed to Kanye West's G.O.O.D. Music. Not only does the latter appear twice on Don't Quit Your Day Job, West also hosted the Queens rapper's mixtape Take 'Em to the Cleaners and invited him to appear on his own album, The College Dropout. All this friendly cooperation is probably helped by the fact that both MCs share a love for clean, mellow, soul-sample-based production, have strikingly similar delivery styles -- often rhyming words with themselves in a voice that's closer to speaking than rapping -- and choose to write about similar topics. But Consequence isn't some neophyte MC who West has taken on as a prot?g?. He made his debut in 1996 on A Tribe Called Quest's record Beats, Rhymes and Life, and, while his career since then has not been overly active, he has kept a hand in music the entire time. But perhaps because it took him more than a decade since that appearance, Consequence chose to approach his first actual solo album from the perspective of a kid just starting out in the game. He begins Don't Quit Your Day Job with a song/skit about being behind on bills and having to put his "pride to the side/Go get a 9 to 5" and ends it with deciding to focus all his time and energy on music instead (having to deal with a nagging mother throughout). The rest of the record moves from tracks about trying to make it big, or at least make it ("Don't Forget Em") to women ("Feel This Way") to general observations on life ("The Good, the Bad, the Ugly"). It's all very relatable; Consequence isn't trying to present himself as anything more than just a regular guy, in the same way West has, and it's apparent. This means that even in songs like "Pretty Little Sexy Mama," where he uses fairy tale imagery throughout ("I make a damsel-in-distress dismantle her dress/And once you meet me past the guards I can handle the rest/I got a plan for the stress in these evil times/So I keep on body armor like it's Medieval Times"), it seems natural and real, the MC's slightly lisping voice ably keeping time and cadence well. In fact, it's in pieces like "Night Night," in which he warns he'll fight if he needs to, that things come across a little forced. It's as if he feels he has to prove his street cred when his talent -- part old-school, part backpacker -- is imposing enough, appealing in its intelligence and uniqueness; he doesn't have to slip into stereotypes to show he's a real rapper, he can let his rhymes speak for themselves. [A 'clean' version appeared in 2007.] ~ Marisa Brown

Producer: Kanye West; Darren Henson; Keezo Kane; Younglord the Truth; Len Woolfolk "Low Down"; Keith Pelzer; Kanye West

Engineer: Andrew Dawson; Ari Raskin

 
Compilation Appearances
Vol. 1-Traffic Jams (Explicit Version)
College Dropout (Explicit Version)
College Dropout (Clean)
Chitlin Circuit
Late Registration (Explicit Version)
Late Registration (Clean Version)
Hip Hop Violinist (Explicit Version)
Hip Hop Violinst
Professional Part 3 (Cln)
Professional Part 3(Explicit Version)
Listennn The Album (Explicit Version)
Gospel According To Patti Labelle
Grey Hairs
Loss 4 Wordz
Time Machine(Explicit Version)

 
Associated Artists and Works
Q-Tip

 
Technical Info
Release Date : 03/06/2007
Original Release Date : 2007
Catalog ID : 89631
Label : Red Urban
Number of Discs : 1
Runtime : 49m : 59s
Studio/Live : Studio
Mono/Stereo : Stereo
SPAR Code : n/a
UPC : 00828768963128

  
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