ESSENTIAL HIP HOP 7 (2006)

Artist: Various
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Format:  CD
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Product Summary
Label: Tommy Boy
UPC: 00661868164022
Release Date: 1/24/2006
Buy.com Sku: 202144351
Item#: M2SNY2
Format:  CD

Song Listing

Disc 1
Song TitleSample
1. I'm Your Pusher - Ice-T ~ Various Artists
2. Talkin' All That Jazz - Stetsasonic ~ Various Artists
3. Planet Rock - Afrika Bambaataa & The Soul Sonic Force ~ Various Artists
4. Bubble Bunch, The - Jimmy Spicer ~ Various Artists
5. My Mic Sounds Nice - Salt 'N Pepa ~ Various Artists
6. Fight The Power - Public Enemy ~ Various Artists
7. Walk This Way - Run-DMC ~ Various Artists
8. Joy & Pain - Rob Base & DJ E-Z Rock ~ Various Artists
9. Sweet Black P***y - DJ Quick ~ Various Artists
10. Wrath Of My Madness - Queen Latifah ~ Various Artists
11. On The Radio - Crash Crew ~ Various Artists
12. Doowutchyalike - Digital Underground ~ Various Artists



 
Album Notes and Credits

Notes & Personnel Info
Liner Note Author: Nelson George.
Photographer: Martha Cooper.
Stetsasonic's "Talkin' All That Jazz," released in 1988, might be the most exemplary track in the history of hip-hop, even though it's nowhere near as well known as "Rapper's Delight." Its sample sources, including Banbarra's "Shack Up" and Lonnie Liston Smith's "Expansions," are some of the most notorious to date. And though they make very brief and practically buried appearances, the sly percussive flicks from Mtume's "Juicy Fruit" play a very important role -- James Mtume had spoken out against producers who rely on sampling, and his words get filleted by Stetsasonic's vicious rhymes, though he is never addressed by name. "Talkin' All That Jazz" has it all: it's a heated dis track, which argues strongly for the validity of sampling, and it deploys a flurry of craftily used breaks. It's also part of one of the better volumes in Tommy Boy's Hip Hop Essentials series. Though the disc, the seventh of 12, contains several oft-compiled classics (including Afrika Bambaataa's "Planet Rock," Jimmy Spicer's "The Bubble Bunch," and Public Enemy's "Fight the Power"), it also features several classics (Salt-N-Pepa's "My Mic Sounds Nice," Queen Latifah's "Wrath of My Madness," and Crash Crew's "On the Radio") that should be familiar to as many rap fans as possible. Tommy Boy loses points for spelling DJ Quik's name with a "c," but they redeem themselves by closing this volume with Digital Underground's "Doowutchyalike," one of the loopiest songs heard on the radio during 1989 and 1990 (with an absolutely berserk video to match). ~ Andy Kellman

Producer: William Hamilton; Larry Smith; MC Delite; DJ Mark; Ice-T; The 45 King & Louie; Rick Rubin; Rob Base; Russell Simmons; Sylvia Robinson; Stu Fine (Compilation); Victor Lee (Compilation)

 
Technical Info
Release Date : 01/24/2006
Original Release Date : 2006
Catalog ID : 1640
Label : Tommy Boy
Number of Discs : 1
Studio/Live : Studio
Mono/Stereo : Stereo
SPAR Code : n/a
UPC : 00661868164022

  


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