Cypress Hill - Cypress Hill (1991)
Cover Front Album
Cover Front: Cypress Hill: Cypress Hill
Artist/Composer Cypress Hill
Length 46:46
Label Ruffhouse/Columbia
Cat. Number CK 47889
Release Date 1991
Format CD
Packaging Jewel Case
Category Hip Hop
Genre General Hip Hop; General Rap
Buy this CD Buy this CD at Amazon.com! Diese CD bei Amazon.de kaufen!
Track List
01 Pigs 02:51
02 How I Could Just Kill A Man 04:08
03 Hand On The Pump 04:03
04 Hole In The Head 03:33
05 Ultraviolet Dreams 00:41
06 Light Another 03:17
07 The Phuncky Feel One 03:28
08 Break It Up 01:07
09 Real Estate 03:45
10 Stoned Is The Way Of The Walk 02:46
11 Psycobetabuckdown 02:59
12 Something For The Blunted 01:15
13 Latin Lingo 03:58
14 The Funky Cypress Hill Shit 04:01
15 Tres Equis 01:54
16 Born To Get Busy 03:00
Personal
Index 295
Collection Status In Collection
Details
Spars DDD
Rare No
Sound Stereo
UPC 074644788921
Amazon.de ASIN B000026OZS
Amazon.com ASIN B0000027RY
Notes
It's hard enough to transform an entire musical genre - Cypress Hill's eponymous debut album revolutionized hip-hop in several respects. Although they weren't the first Latino rappers, nor the first to mix Spanish and English, they were the first to achieve a substantial following, thanks to their highly distinctive sound. Along with the Beastie Boys and Public Enemy, Cypress Hill was also one of the first rap groups to bridge the gap with fans of both hard rock and alternative rock. And, most importantly, they created a sonic blueprint that would become one of the most widely copied in hip-hop. In keeping with their pro-marijuana stance, Cypress Hill intentionally crafted its music to sound stoned - lots of slow, lazy beats, fat bass, weird noises, and creepily distant-sounding samples. The surreal lyrical narratives were almost exclusively spun by B-Real in a nasal, sing-song, instantly recognizable delivery that only added to the music's hazy, evocative atmosphere; as a frontman, he could be funny, frightening, or just plain bizarre (again, kind of like the experience of being stoned). Whether he's taunting cops or singing nursery rhyme-like choruses about blasting holes in people with shotguns, B-Real's blunted-gangsta posture is nearly always underpinned by a cartoonish sense of humor. It's never clear how serious the threats are, but that actually makes them all the more menacing. The sound and style of Cypress Hill was hugely influential, particularly on Dr. Dre's boundary-shattering 1992 blockbuster The Chronic; yet despite its legions of imitators, Cypress Hill still sounds fresh and original today, simply because few hip-hop artists can put its sound across with such force of personality or imagination.

Item last modified: 2004 (date unknown)
Page last updated: 28.10.2006 22:55:59 / Luzian Wild

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