It's Dark and Hell Is Hot [Clean] [Edited]DMX
Release Date: 05/19/1998
Original Release:
1998
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 277489_CD
UPC # 731455822328
Label: Def Jam (USA)
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Disc: 1
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: DMX
Artist: The Lox; Mase; Sheek of The Lox; Drag-On; Kasino; Loose; Big Stan Distributor: Universal Distribution Notes: Personnel: DMX, Sheek, Big Stan, Loose, Kasino, Dragon, The Lox, Mase (rap vocals); Nardo (vocals). Producers include: Irv Gotti, Lil' Rob, Swizz, PK, Dame Grease. Engineers include: Patrick Viala, Justice Johnson, Rich Keller. Producers include: Irv Gotti, Lil' Rob, Swizz, PK, Dame Grease. Engineers include: Patrick Viala, Justice Johnson, Rich Keller. Personnel: Jamie ?, Warren ?, Nardo (vocals, background vocals); Randy ? (vocals); Clifford Branch (keyboards); Lovey Ford, Schamika Grant, Jamie (background vocals). Audio Mixers: D'Anthony Johnson; Dame Grease; Charles "Prince Charles" Alexander ; Prince Charles; Ken Ifill; Kevin Crouse; Rich Keller. Recording information: Chung K; New Horizon Studios, Incorperat; Power House, New York, NY; Quad Recording Studios, New Yor. Photographer: Jonathan Mannion. In 1998, DMX brings new energy to a laid-back hip-hop scene. While various MCs have been busy partying and dancing, DMX has been amping himself up for a powerful debut. IT'S DARK AND HELL IS HOT is the first full-length release from the rapper, despite an attempt to break through in 1993. It wasn't until legendary rap label Def Jam got a hold of him that DMX's career began to take off. While being featured on a number of blazing posse cuts, DMX took hip-hoppers to the next level with his smash single, "Get At Me Dog." With tight production and lyrical gymnastics, DMX puts the hardcore back into hip-hop. Just as rap music was reaching its toughest, darkest, grimmest period yet, following the assassinations of 2Pac and Biggie in the late '90s, along came DMX and his fellow Ruff Ryders, who embodied the essence of inner-city machismo to a tee, as showcased throughout the tellingly titled It's Dark and Hell Is Hot. Unlike so many other hardcore rappers who are more rhetorical than physical, DMX commands an aggressive aura without even speaking a word. He showcases his chiseled physique on the arresting album cover and trumpets his animalistic nature with frequent barking, growling, and snarling throughout the album. He also collaborates with muscular producers Swizz Beatz and Dame Grease, who specialize in slamming synth-driven beats rather than sample-driven ones. Further unlike so many other hardcore rappers from the time, DMX is meaningful as well as symbolic. He professes an ideology that stresses the inner world -- characterized by such qualities as survival, wisdom, strength, respect, and faith -- rather than the material one that infatuates most rappers of his time. It helpes that his album includes a few mammoth highlights ("Ruff Ryders' Anthem," "Get at Me Dog," "Let Me Fly," and "I Can Feel It") as well as a light, mid-album diversion ("How's It Goin' Down"). The long running length of It's Dark and Hell Is Hot does wear you down after a while, since nearly every song here sans "How's It Goin' Down" hits hard and maintains the album's deadly serious attitude. Even so, It's Dark and Hell Is Hot is a tremendous debut, laying out DMX's complex persona with candor, from his faith in God to his fixation with canine motifs, and doing so with dramatic flair. [The clean versions edits all moments of profanity.] ~ Jason Birchmeier
Rolling Stone (7/9-23/98, p.134) - 3 Stars (out of 5) - "...relies heavily on pop-y, verse-chorus-verse song structures more common with commercial rappers than with roughneck MCs. DMX sidesteps the potential banality of this radio-ready format...with a ferocious delivery reminiscent of vintage L.L. Cool J..."
Spin (8/98, p.143) - 6 (out of 10) - "...a psychotic concept album that celebrates bloody style over creative substance....DMX never shares a worldview not seen from the inside of a prison or from behind a blue-steel trigger..."
Q (8/00, p.124) - 4 stars out of 5 - "...Hard-as-nails multi-platinum 1998 debut complete with wall-to-wall cursing, booming beats and - scariest of all - Phil Collins' 'In The Air Tonight' being given a good slapping..."
The Source (7/98, p.151) - 4 Mics (out of 5) - "...DMX raps as if he's about to explode....IT'S DARK AND HELL IS HOT is a mind-gripping opus that fully encompasses the appeal of one of rap's newest sensations..."
Like pop stars in the days of yore, late-1990s hip-hop icon DMX has made his mark both as a recording artist and as an actor. His charisma and intensity serve him as well on screen as they do on record, and he has appeared in such popular films as ROMEO MUST DIE and EXIT WOUNDS. Musically, the artist formerly known as Earl Simmons employs rough-edged lyrics and a spitfire delivery that make him seem like a sonic force of nature. Like any hardcore rapper worth his salt, DMX has had his brushes with the law, but he's never let legal difficulties stand in the way of his career.
Also Appears On:
Similar Artist:
All City B.I.G., Notorious (The) Banks, Lloyd Bonecrusher Canibus Cappadonna Cube, Ice Drama Eve Firm (Rap) (The) Flipmode Squad GP Wu Game (The) J, LL Cool Jay-Z Jones, Jim (Rap) Killah Priest Killah, Ghostface Killer Mike Lil' Kim Ma, Remy Method Man Mobb Deep Mr. Cheeks Murray, Keith N.O.R.E. Nas Onyx Papoose Redman Sticky Fingaz Webbie Wu-Tang Clan Yayo, Tony
Influences:
2Pac B.I.G., Notorious (The) EPMD Gang Starr J, LL Cool KRS-One Main Source N.W.A. Public Enemy Rick, Slick Run-D.M.C. Wu-Tang Clan
Similar Genres:
East Coast Rap |