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Track Listing 1. I Can't Live Without My Radio 2. You Can't Dance 3. Dear Yvette 4. I Can Give You More 5. Dangerous 6. Interlude 7. Rock the Bells 8. I Need a Beat 9. That's a Lie 10. You'll Rock 11. I Want You
| Details | | Producer: | Rick Rubin | | Distributor: | Universal Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Personnel includes: LL Cool J (rap vocals). Recorded at Chung King House Of Metal, New York, New York. Includes liner notes by Nelson George. Released in 1985, RADIO marks the debut of hip-hop icon LL Cool J. Only in his late teens at the time, the strikingly handsome LL (born James Todd Smith) unleashed 11 supremely confident rhymes with a powerful, fearsome delivery that marked him as a rap icon from day one. LL kicks off the album by sending out an ode, not to a lady, but to his boombox ("I Can't Live Without My Radio"), and never lets up from there, allowing his tough (yet never overly aggressive) lyrics to flow at a steady clip. RADIO is also significant as one of the first records produced by rap/rock Renaissance man Rick Rubin, who contributes the kind of minimal metal-guitar licks and spare, hard-hitting beats that defined mid-80s hip-hop, most notably on the propulsive tunes "Rock the Bells" and "I Need a Beat." Along with Run-DMC's RAISING HELL and the Beastie Boys' LICENSED TO ILL, RADIO forms a trilogy of New York City-based, Rubin-helmed albums that helped to take rap to a whole new level. For fans of old-school hip-hop, this disc is absolutely essential. The CD-reissue edition of the album contains liner notes by music scholar Nelson George.
Industry Reviews ...As a classic of Def Jam's Rubinned-up metallic phase...`Rock The Bells' is up there with `Walk This Way', `She Watch Channel Zero' and `Rhymin & Stealin'... Melody Maker (07/22/1995)
4 Stars - Excellent - ...This is elemental rap... [with] a now obvious debt to rock dynamics... Q (09/01/1995)
Ranked #69 in Rolling Stone's 100 Best Albums Of The Eighties survey.
4 Stars - Excellent - ...This is elemental rap... [with] a now obvious debt to rock dynamics...Melody Maker (7/22/95, p.35) - ...As a classic of Def Jam's Rubinned-up metallic phase...`Rock The Bells' is up there with `Walk This Way', `She Watch Channel Zero' and `Rhymin & Stealin'... Rolling Stone - Ranked #69 in Rolling Stone's 100 Best Albums Of The Eighties survey.Q (09/01/1995)
Rolling Stone Ranked #69 in Rolling Stone's 100 Best Albums Of The Eighties survey.
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