Whut? Thee Album [PA]Redman
Release Date: 10/20/1992
Original Release:
1992
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 137154_CD
UPC # 731452351821
Label: Def Jam (USA)
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Buying Info
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Disc: 1
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Redman
Engineer: Charlie Marotta; Ken Wallace Distributor: Universal Distribution Notes: Producers: Reggie "Redman" Noble, Erick Sermon, Parrish Smith, Pete Rock. Recorded at North Shore Soundworks, Commack, New York and Ian London Studios, East Islip, New York. Whut? Thee Album is a terrific debut that established Redman as one of the top MCs on the East Coast. His aggressive delivery is more than hardcore enough for the streets, but Whut? is first and foremost a party record. Redman's subject matter centers around his love of funk and his equal love of pot, with some sex and violence thrown in for good measure. He's able to carry it all off with a singular sense of style, thanks to a wild sense of humor that results in some outlandish boasts, surreal threats, and hilarious left-field jokes. In "Blow Your Mind," for example, he announces, "watch me freak it in Korean!," stumbles through part of a verse, and mutters "ah, forget it"; another great moment is "Redman Meets Reggie Noble," a brief duet between himself and his own alter ego in the great Slick Rick tradition. Other offbeat highlights include the genuinely useful instructional track "How to Roll a Blunt" and the hilarious sexcapade story song "A Day With Sooperman Lover." Credit for the album's infectious vibe also has to go to producer Erick Sermon, who fills Whut? with deep, loose-limbed beats cribbed from P-Funk and Zapp. Slamming party jams like "Time 4 Sum Aksion," "Rated R," and "Watch Yo Nuggets" are the real meat and potatoes of the record, and Redman's driving, forceful rhyme style makes them all the more invigorating. Still the strongest, most consistent outing in his catalog, Whut? Thee Album clearly heralds the arrival of a major talent. ~ Steve Huey
Entertainment Weekly (11/6/92, p.68) - "..engaging, hilarious, bargain-basement funk that doesn't care what you think.." - Rating: A-
The Source (11/92, p.63) - 4.5 Stars - Excellent Plus - "..an LP to mush all competition dead in the grill...Redman lives up to all expectations...Make way for the new funk material.."
Melody Maker (5/23/00, p.57) - 4.5 stars out of 5 - "Stone-cold genius...a landmark hip-hop album. 'Rated R' will kill you....Check this out. Do it now."
Reflex (12/15/92, p.74) - "..a riotous, 50-odd minute trip through the mind of `the funkadelic devil'...If you only buy five hip-hop albums this year, see to it that this is one of them.."
Discovered by EPMD's Erick Sermon in the early 1990s, rapper Redman quickly established himself as one of the most original and outrageous personalities in hip-hop. The man born Reggie Noble truly shook up the scene with his '92 debut, WHAT? THEE ALBUM--a torrential out-powering of blunted, schizophrenic party jams that looked to P-funk for grooves and the darkest sectors of the id for lyrical inspiration. A steady string of albums followed, as well as several "high"-profile collaborations on the big screen and in the studio with Method Man as hip-hop's answer to Cheech and Chong. While some critics derided Redman for losing his step in the early '00s, he returned strong on 2007's REDMAN GONE WILD.
Also Appears On:
Similar Genres:
East Coast Rap |