Tracks:
1. Best Foot Forward
2. Building Steam With A Grain Of Salt
3. The Number Song
4. Changeling
5. What Does Your Soul Look Like (Part 4)
6. Untitled
7. Stem/Long Stem
8. Mutual Slump
9. Organ Donor
10. Why Hip Hop Sucks In '96
11. Midnight In A Perfect World
12. Napalm Brain/Scatter Brain
13. What Does Your Soul Look Like (Part 1-Blue Sky Revisit)
About album of the day: The BestEverAlbums.com album of the day is the album appearing most prominently in member charts in the previous 24 hours. If an album, or artist, has previously been selected within a x day period, the next highest album is picked instead (and so on) to ensure a bit of variety. A full history of album of the day can be viewed here.
this is a great gateway drug to the twin worlds of beat-driven sound collages and plunderphonics, and even if i don't really spin it anymore, i value its contribution to my musical consciousness
Is this something anyone would recommend for me? I've never listened to it but I've always thought the album cover was fantastic. _________________ Attention all planets of the solar federation: We have assumed control.
This whole year for me has been one of exploration. Rap and hip hop have been a big part of that. I'll put this on the to listen to list. _________________ Attention all planets of the solar federation: We have assumed control.
Is this something anyone would recommend for me? I've never listened to it but I've always thought the album cover was fantastic.
One of the most important records for me and others; we can talk all day about the cultural and musical impact it had but I think it could be as impactful for you as it was me. It's a pretty impeccable record with a lot to like about it and at the very least it is worth your time and worth hearing.
This was actually one of the first hip hop records I ever heard. Maybe even one of the first five. It's a masterpiece from top to bottom that's weirdly timeless. Essential listening.
This was actually one of the first hip hop records I ever heard.
Me too. I was just talking to a hip-hop producer friend about this in the car today as we listened to songs off Pitchfork's 2000s singles list. Back in mid-2010, I'd heard Ready to Die, Illmatic and this (and Soulja Boy, but that didn't count to BEA at the time). It wasn't until MBDTF that Thanksgiving that I started taking hip-hop super-seriously.
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