Do You Want More?!!!??!
|
| List Price: | £8.99 |
| Price: | £3.98 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £5. Details |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
48 new or used available from £2.59
Average customer review:Track Listing
- Intro / There's Something Goin' On - A.J. Shine, Ahmir-Khalib Thompson, David Ivory, Negaz Grand, Richard Nichols, The Roots
- Proceed - A.J. Shine, Ahmir-Khalib Thompson, Bob Power, David Ivory, George Spatta, Negaz Grand, Otto Capobianco, Richard Nichols, The Roots, Vince Kershner
- Distortion To Static - A.J. Shine, Ahmir-Khalib Thompson, B.R.O.Ther. ?, Bob Power, David Ivory, Gordon Rice, Kelo, Otto Capobianco, Richard Nichols, The Roots, Tim Latham
- Mellow My Man - A.J. Shine, Ahmir-Khalib Thompson, Bob Power, David Ivory, George Spatta, Negaz Grand, Richard Nichols, Steve Howard, The Roots
- I Remain Calm - A.J. Shine, Ahmir-Khalib Thompson, B.R.O.Ther. ?, Black Thought, David Ivory, Jim "Jiff" Hinger, Jim "Schmedly" Bottari, Richard Nichols, Taj Walton, Tariq Trotter, The Roots
- Datskat - A.J. Shine, Ahmir-Khalib Thompson, Bob Power, David Ivory, Gordon Rice, Negaz Grand, Richard Nichols, The Roots
- Lazy Afternoon - A.J. Shine, Ahmir-Khalib Thompson, B.R.O.Ther. ?, Black Thought, Bob Power, David Ivory, Richard Nichols, The Roots
- ? Vs. Rahzel - A.J. Shine, B.R.O.Ther. ?, David Ivory, Rahzel the Godfather of Noize, Richard Nichols, The Roots
- Do You Want More?!!!??! - A.J. Shine, B.R.O.Ther. ?, Black Thought, Bob Power, David Ivory, Richard Nichols, The Roots
- What Goes On, Pt. 7 - A.J. Shine, Ahmir-Khalib Thompson, David Ivory, Jim "Jiff" Hinger, Jim "Schmedly" Bottari, Negaz Grand, Otto Capobianco, Richard Nichols, Taj Walton, The Roots
- Essaywhuman?!!!??! - The Roots
- Swept Away - A.J. Shine, Ahmir-Khalib Thompson, David Ivory, Jim "Jiff" Hinger, Negaz Grand, Richard Nichols, The Roots
- You Ain't Fly - A.J. Shine, Bob Power, George Spatta, Negaz Grand, Otto Capobianco, Richard Nichols, The Roots
- Silent Treatment - A.J. Shine, Ahmir-Khalib Thompson, Bob Power, David Ivory, George Spatta, Negaz Grand, Richard Nichols, The Roots, Vince Kershner
- The Lesson Pt. 1 - The Roots
- The Unlocking - The Roots
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #10763 in Music
- Released on: 1999-03-20
- Number of discs: 1
- Format: Explicit Lyrics
- Dimensions: .22 pounds
- Running time: 71 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
Typically, we're better off ignoring the boasts of a rapper who claims to describe his own music, but when the Roots' lead voice Black Thought opens up his group's debut album by saying, "You are all about to witness some organic hip-hop jazz," it's a good idea to listen up. Organic is a fitting adjective for a hip-hop crew whose m.o. is as different from the typical studio-locked DJ/MC combo as grass is to Astroturf.
Nothing wrong with a little artificial grazeland, of course, but the Roots are making tasty roughage that blooms into real songs, where raps wind around bass, drums, keys, and horns, and where instruments coil up to voice cadences--where music and lyrics meet and grow together naturally, not coincidentally. You can hear the Roots' heart pump hardest when they pull off the things loops and samples cannot: just check the vocal/instrument interchanges of "Essaywhuman?!!!??!" or the left-turn instrumental digression midway through "Mellow My Man" to witness the living sounds of rap.
The Roots' Philadelphia-based groove collective build slick acid jazz playing around the smooth East Coast rhyming of A Tribe Called Quest and wild West Coast freestyling to create sounds as formless and fluid as jazz, but never unrecognisable as hip-hop. The music picks up where the mad scatting and melodic trills of L.A.'s defunct Freestyle Fellowship left off, and wakes up the tired hype of jazz/rap cross-pollination to new possibilities. The roots of this kind of fusion have long been around, though perhaps these Roots are hope for a new dawning. --Roni Sarig
CD Description
As the hip-hop nation grew, it was natural for jazz groovesto play an integral part of its evolution. From DJs spinning Sonny Rollins loops over beats, to rappers vocally challenging seasoned soloists (as Guru did with trumpeter Don Cherry), the initial burst of energy that a new-found jazz influence gave to hip-hop was like a blood transfusion, providing for a healthier long-term existence. With DO YOU WANT MORE?!!!??!, the Roots up the ante on all the jazz-tip outfits that have rolled out before them, fully integrating a live bandwith the rappers, and kicking a funky rhyme like it hasn't been kicked before...and at the Montreaux Jazz Festival, no less.
The Philadelphia quartet--MCs Black Thought and Malik B., bassist Hub, and drummer B.R.O. The R.?--treat the vocalists as simply two more instrumentalists, and thus as equal elements to the overall sound. The rappers carry the mic with a singular funky swing, comfortable in any flow settingbut often mirroring the verbal interplay of A Tribe Called Quest (whom they also name-check); and the rhythm section drops its own share of bombs, when they're not busy laying down grooves for the likes of Steve Coleman and other additional players. The space heats up quickest when Black Thought and Malik use the band as a springboard for interactive flurries, and play directly off them (the live, freestyle grind, "Essay Whuman?!!??"). When such genuine moments of improvisation arise, the Roots seem like they're miles ahead of everybody else on hip-hop's jazz fusion highway.
Customer Reviews
Awesome, 100% live and 200% groovy hip hop.
What can I say? If you haven't heard this yet, you are missing out on some seriously good tunes. Combines the retro sound of the Fender Rhodes with some real funky bass playing, the expected awesomely solid drums from BROTHER ? and complex, muti layered rap. This is the future of hip hop, right here, right now.
I know you dig it when I kick it baby
This is the Roots first major label release. Organix was produced so they had something to sell at their concerts whilst touring Europe (they were shunned by the gangsta gangsta early 90s hip-hop community but positively embraced by the left-field european scene). Do You want More?!!??! is a fanstastic album, from start to finish it provides the listener with a well thought-out, musically accomplished album which served to alert the American public to something 'a bit different' coming out of Philly.
There are so many notable songs on this album it is hard to pick one or two to talk about. The stand-out track on the album, in my humble opinion, is probably the title song, with it's rolling bagpipe soundscape (yes bagpipes being used in a hip-hop context), it's head-nodding hook reminiscent of old-school classics, the a-capella vocal scratching and great Thought verse. Another fantastic track is the remade Essaywhuman?!!!??! which first appeared on Organix, with Black Thought 'duelling' with live instruments.
The album maintains a flow throughout, probably due to the laid back drum beats, and sparsely produced melodies. Getting softer towards the end, with a fore-runner of 'You Got Me'-style track 'Silent Treatment'.
If you have listened to any of the later Roots catalogue, and enjoyed it, or in fact like fellow Okayplayer artists Common, Reflection Eternal, etc then you should buy this album. It is jazzier than Things Fall Apart, similar-yet-better than Illadelph Halflife, and a great notice of the evolution of the Roots' sound when compared to Phrenology (or other ?uestlove produced albums eg Like Water For Chocolate).
People use the word improvement when describing the Roots' releases, but as they have all been of a high standard, it should be seen as a progression of sound.
Get Blackstar, Train of Thought, Can I Borrow A Dollar?, Resurrection, All ATCQ, A Wolf In Sheep's Clothing, J5 LP and Exit as soon as possible.
The future sound of jazz-hiphop
Live organic Illadelpia hip hop jazz, drawing off a wide range of influences both old and new, the musical geniuses of ?estlove, Hub and Scott Storch combine with the raw, conscious vocal streams of Black Thought, Malik B and Dice Raw to provide the ideal introduction to the phenomena that has become the sound of Philadelphia. If you find most commercial hip-hop a turn-off with its synthesized breaks and melodies, or even if you think you don't like hip-hop you might like to take a listen to this. Essential.



![Reflection Eternal [Train Of Thought]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/61h%2BV4lSf0L._SL75_.jpg)

