De La Soul
3 Feet High and Rising
Label ©  Tommy Boy
Release Year  1989
Length  1:07:28
Genre  Hip-Hop
Personal Star Rating [1-5]  
  Ref#  D-0088
Bitrate  320 Kbps
  Other  
  Info  
    Track Listing:
      1.  
      Intro  
       1:44  
      2.  
      The Magic Number  
       3:16  
      3.  
      Change In Speak  
       2:33  
      4.  
      Cool Breeze On The Rocks  
       0:48  
      5.  
      Can You Keep A Secret  
       1:41  
      6.  
      Jenifa Taught Me  
       3:25  
      7.  
      Ghetto Thang  
       3:37  
      8.  
      Transmitting Live From Mars  
       1:09  
      9.  
      Eye Know  
       4:15  
      10.  
      Take It Off  
       1:53  
      11.  
      A Little Bit Of Soap  
       0:57  
      12.  
      Tread Water  
       3:47  
      13.  
      Potholes In My Lawn  
       3:49  
      14.  
      Say No Go  
       4:21  
      15.  
      Do As De La Does  
       2:13  
      16.  
      Plug Tunin'  
       4:07  
      17.  
      De La Orgee  
       1:14  
      18.  
      Buddy  
       4:55  
      19.  
      Description  
       1:32  
      20.  
      Me Myself And Eye  
       3:41  
      21.  
      This Is A Recording 4 Living In A Fulltime Era  
       3:22  
      22.  
      I Can Do Anything  
       0:42  
      23.  
      D.A.I.S.Y. Age  
       4:43  
      24.  
      Plug Tunin'  
       3:44  
    Additional info: | top
      De La's debut represented a new path for hip-hop, a reaction to conventions that had turned into clichés. It was friendly and playful enough to cross over to a pop audience (thanks to Prince Paul's production, which found the funk hiding inside Steely Dan and "Schoolhouse Rock"), but complicated and tough enough to be hugely influential in the hip-hop world. Cryptic but ecstatic, and sometimes sexy (especially the ingenious double-entendre "Buddy"), Trugoy and Posdnuos's lyrics invented a "new style of speak," dense with self-invented slang and metaphors. The hits, including "Say No Go" and "Me Myself And I," are delightful, but the little sketches and sound-experiments between them make the whole disc flow effortlessly. --Douglas Wolk

      Review by John Bush

      The most inventive, assured, and playful debut in hip-hop history, 3 Feet High and Rising not only proved that rappers didn't have to talk about the streets to succeed, but also expanded the palette of sampling material with a kaleidoscope of sounds and references culled from pop, soul, disco, and even country music. Weaving clever wordplay and deft rhymes across two dozen tracks loosely organized around a game-show theme, De La Soul broke down boundaries all over the LP, moving easily from the groovy my-philosophy intro "The Magic Number" to an intelligent, caring inner-city vignette named "Ghetto Thang" to the freewheeling end-of-innocence tale "Jenifa Taught Me (Derwin's Revenge)." Rappers Posdnuos and Trugoy the Dove talked about anything they wanted (up to and including body odor), playing fast and loose on the mic like Biz Markie. Thinly disguised under a layer of humor, their lyrical themes ranged from true love ("Eye Know") to the destructive power of drugs ("Say No Go") to Daisy Age philosophy ("Tread Water") to sex ("Buddy"). Prince Paul (from Stetsasonic) and DJ Pasemaster Mase led the way on the production end, with dozens of samples from all sorts of left-field artists -- including Johnny Cash, the Mad Lads, Steely Dan, Public Enemy, Hall & Oates, and the Turtles. The pair didn't just use those samples as hooks or drumbreaks -- like most hip-hop producers had in the past -- but as split-second fills and in-jokes that made some tracks sound more like DJ records. Even "Potholes on My Lawn," which samples a mouth harp and yodeling (for the chorus, no less), became a big R&B hit. If it was easy to believe the revolution was here from listening to the rapping and production on Public Enemy's It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, with De La Soul the Daisy Age seemed to promise a new era of positivity in hip-hop.
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