Details

Track Listing DISC 1: 1. Intro 2. Magic Number, The 3. Change in Speak 4. Cool Breeze on the Rocks 5. Can U Keep a Secret 6. Jenifa Taught Me (Derwin's Revenge) 7. Ghetto Thang 8. Transmitting Live From Mars 9. Eye Know 10. Take It Off 11. Little Bit of Soap, A 12. Tread Water 13. Potholes in My Lawn 14. Say No Go 15. Do as de la Does 16. Plug Tunin' (Last Chance to Comprehend) 17. De la Orgee 18. Buddy - (with Jungle Brothers/Q-Tip) 19. Description 20. Me Myself and I 21. This Is a Recording 4 Living in a Full Time Era (L.I.F.E.) 22. I Can Do Anything (Delacratic) 23. D.A.I.S.Y. Age 24. Plug Tunin' - (original 12" version)
DISC 2: BONUS DISC: 1. Freedom of Speech (We Got Three Minutes) 2. Strickly Dan Stuckie 3. Jenifa (Taught Me) - (12" version) 4. Skip to My Loop 5. Potholes in My Lawn - (12" version) 6. Me Myself and I - (Oblapos Mode version) 7. Ain't Hip to Be Labeled a Hippie 8. What's More 9. Brain Washed Follower 10. Say No Go - (New Keys version) 11. Mack Daddy on the Left, The 12. Double Huey Skit 13. Ghetto Thang - (Ghetto Ximer version) 14. Eye Know - (The Know It All mix)
Album Notes 3 FEET HIGH AND RISING includes a limited edition bonus disc containing rare B-sides and remixes. De La Soul: Trugoy The Dove, Posdnuos, P.A. Pase Master Mase. Additional personnel: Q-Tip, Jungle Brothers, Prince Paul, Red Alert, MC Lyte (vocals); Al Watts, Donald "Kid Wonder" Newkirk, Human Mix Machine Wise, Misha, Popmaster Hight, China, Jette, Andre Myers, Granny (background vocals). Engineers include: Sue Fisher, Bob Coulter, Dan Miller. Recorded at Calliope, New York, New York. They were like a breath of fresh air when they showed up on the scene in 1989, bringing a new vision to the young genre still known as rap. With one album De La Soul helped usher in the New School that dominated hip hop before the rise of Gangsta. Sure, some of 3 FEET HIGH AND RISING may already sound dated, like some strange relic from an imaginary 1989 summer of love, but it's still packed with the energy and humor that made it so irresistible in the first place. Posdnuos, Trugoy and Mase rapped in a lazily melodic code you could spend hours trying to decipher, but once you accepted the "Change In Speak," it was easier to just lay back and let the diverse samples move your butt. The hits still sound fresh--pop chestnuts like "Eye Know" and "Buddy" (featuring the first appearance of A Tribe Called Quest), as well as self-descriptive songs like "The Magic Number." And although the game show theme that binds together the loose frame of the record is a bit silly, it must be remembered that it created the current craze of interludes and asides found on today's rap albums (from Wu Tang Clan to Too Short). 3 FEET HIGH... is the epitome of Afro-centric peace-oriented rap; yet De La Soul moved on very quickly from this manifestation of the style, although they've yet to lose their ingenuity or intelligence. A visit to the D.A.I.S.Y. Age can do you no harm--it might even keep you sane in these days of guns and gangs.
Industry Reviews Ranked #3 in NME's list of The 50 Greatest Albums Of The '80s. NME (09/25/1993)
Ranked #19 in NME's list of the 'Greatest Albums Of All Time.' NME (10/02/1993)
...3 FEET HIGH is a bona-fide classic that changed the hip-hop scene - and music in general - forever... Alternative Press (01/01/2002)
5 stars out of 5 - ...The expansive confidence of youth's first flush flows through its grooves... Uncut (06/01/2003)
...Fine and innovative....An antidote to all the guns and macho bluster, it was supposed to herald a new touchy-feely age for hip hop... Q (08/01/1999)
...The greatest alt-rap LP ever made... Spin (04/01/2002)
Included in AP's 10 Essential '80s Albums - ...Their revolutionary use of samples and abstract subject matter kicked down the doors... Alternative Press (08/01/2001)
Included in Q Magazine's Best Psychedelic Albums of All Time issue. Q (08/01/1989)
|
|