Dirty South Classics [PA]Goodie Mob
Release Date: 12/16/2003
Original Release:
2003
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 508184_CD
UPC # 828765269322
Label: Arista Records (USA)
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Disc: 1
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Goodie Mob
Artist: Big Boi; Outkast; Backbone; TLC Distributor: BMG (distributor) Notes: Goodie Mob: Big Gipp, Khujo, T-Mo, Cee-Lo. Additional personnel includes: Outkast, Backbone, TLC. Producers: Organized Noize, Mr. DJ, Craig Love. Compilation producer: Mickey Wright. Photographer: John R. Glembin. Goodie Mob didn't release a lot of music during their day in the sun, and what they did release certainly varied in quality, but in the end, they stood as perhaps the definitive Dirty South group of the late '90s (and not just because they coined the term on their 1995 song of the same name). In total, the pioneering quartet from Atlanta released one seminal, classic album (Soul Food [1995]) and two lesser efforts (Still Standing [1998] and World Party [1999]), or at least they had done so by the time Arista compiled Dirty South Classics, a very welcome best-of collection that showcases precisely why Goodie Mob are held in such high regard despite their limited output and modest commercial success. The hourlong collection gathers every significant song Goodie Mob recorded (including standouts like "Cell Therapy," "Soul Food," "Black Ice," "They Don't Dance No Mo'," and "What It Ain't [Ghetto Enuff]"), along with some less significant but nonetheless excellent songs like "Free," "Beautiful Skin," and "Dirty South" that further showcase what made the group so revolutionary during its day (and if not for the related work of OutKast, peerless at that). As well-compiled as it is, Dirty South Classics isn't necessarily definitive. You're still going to want to pick up Soul Food at some point, perhaps even beforehand -- it can't be stressed enough how remarkable that album was, and still is. ~ Jason Birchmeier
Rolling Stone (3/4/04, p.68) - 3 stars out of 5 - "[Atlanta's] Goodie Mob first patented the style [of eccentric Southern hip-hop]..."
Atlanta-based rap group Goodie Mob (whose name means "The Good Die Mostly Over Bull") were among the first to emerge from Atlanta, Georgia's fertile hip-hop scene. Combining hip-hop with soul music, poetry, and a more organic, less commercial brand of lyricism, Goodie Mob have been trying to recreate the critical success of their debut SOUL FOOD since its 1995 release.
Also Appears On:
Similar Artist:
8Ball & MJG Backbone Badu, Erykah Black Eyed Peas Boi, Big Calhoun, Slimm Common Company Flow Cool Breeze Dead Prez Def, Mos Dré (1~Outkast) Elliott, Missy Field Mob Gray, Macy Haystack Joi Jurassic 5 Killer Mike Kweli, Talib Made Men Nappy Roots Roots (The) Scott, Jill Spooks Tela The Fugees UGK Wu-Tang Clan
Influences:
Arrested Development Brand Nubian De La Soul Eric B. & Rakim Hendrix, Jimi Hooker, John Lee Jungle Brothers New Kingdom Poor Righteous Teachers Public Enemy Scarface Tribe Called Quest (A) Waters, Muddy
Similar Genres:
Southern Rap |