Cypress Hill - Cypress Hill
Facts
| Artist(s) | Cypress Hill |
| Studio | Sony |
| Release Date | August 13, 1991 |
| UPC Code | 074644788921 |
| Buy this item | $7.99 at Amazon.com As of Dec 5 10:34 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
About Cypress Hill - Cypress Hill
Led by the deep-toned Sen Dog and the deliciously adenoidal whine of B-Real and backed by DJ Muggs's beats--as thick as the smoke they inhaled--Cypress Hill spun dope-fueled tales of revenge, revolution, recreational drug use, gangbanging, and cultural pride. Like R. Crumb's Mr. Natural, but with a hardened voice and a B-boy attitude, Cypress Hill slow-walked their funk-flavored way through a minefield of anthems (the still sizzling "How I Could Just Kill a Man") and comic manifestos ("Stoned Is the Way of the Walk"). Heavy on the bass line and punctuated by flashes of wit and rage, Cypress Hill's joint was definitely one to draw deep on. --Amy Linden Amazon.com
Tracks
- Pigs
- How I Could Just Kill a Man
- Hand on the Pump
- Hole in the Head
- Ultraviolet Dreams
- Light Another
- The Phuncky Feel One
- Break It Up
- Real Estate
- Stoned Is the Way of the Walk
- Psycobetabuckdown
- Something for the Blunted
- Latin Lingo
- The Funky Cypress Hill Shit
- Tres Equis
- Born to Get Busy
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User Reviews
Average user review:| "Light Another Joint!" (Rating: 8 out of 10- -4.0 stars) |
Throughout this album, the standouts are easy to pick out. The singles "How Could I Just Kill A Man" and "Hand On The Pump" are both great. Further on the album, you have the track "Stoned Is The Way Of The Walk". Muggs places a spin on the loud horns all on the track. In fact, Muggs' production helps a lot of the tracks standout. It works with Sen Dog on his solo track "Latin Lingo", and I believe that is him rhyming in Spanish on "Tres Equis". Everything comes together on "The Cypress Hill ****", as that is one of my favorite tracks from the group.
Only tracks that really didn't standout for me are "Psycobetabuckdown", and "Real Estate". Both tracks have an innovative Cypress Hill sound, but did absolutely nothing for me.
Cypress Hill's self titled album hold high regards to their longtime fan base. Many may consider this as their best album, and I have to agree. I also recommend you listen to their 1993 follow up album Black Sunday, as it follows the same route as this one. An album with excellent production and great concepts, this album is definitely worth a purchase to add in your collection. Peace.
Lyrics: A-
Production: A
Guest Appearances: N/A
Musical Vibes: B+
Top 5 Tracks:
1. The Cypress Hill ****
2. Hand On The Pump
3. How Could I Just Kill A Man
4. Stoned Is The Way Of The Walk
5. Tres Equis
Honorable Mention:
1. Born To Get Busy
2. Light Another November 13, 2008
| Original and timeless album |
The album begins with the deliciously funky "Pigs," an anti-police statement with a looping guitar line and good verses from all parties. The classic song "How I Could Just Kill a Man" follows, the song that shot the group to superstardom. This song demonstrates their crazy style and Muggs's amazing beats, with its soaring synth line and horns. "Hand on the Pump" has a good chorus and similar instrumentals to the first song, and the chant-along "Hole in the Head" has deep bass and great verses. The upbeat smoking anthem "Light Another" allows B-Real to demonstrate a different flow, and the funny "The Phuncky Feel One" follows. "Real Estate" represents Los Angeles as only Cypress Hill does, and another pro-weed song, the excellent "Stoned Is the Way of the Walk," comes next. I love "Psychobetabuckdown," a threatening and head-spinning angry song. "Latin Lingo" represents their Cuban roots, and "The Funky Cypress Hill S..." is aptly titled. The horn heavy "Tres Equis" precedes the closer, the great "Born to Get Busy." Throughout the album, short tracks like "Ultraviolet Dreams," "Break It Up," and "Something for the Blunted" provide short, smoked out interludes of heavy Muggs beats.
In my opinion, this debut is Cypress Hill's finest work (if you like this also check out 1993's "Black Sunday"). Funny, lyrical, funky, musical, but most of all just entertaining and enjoyable, this album was very influential but somehow still sounds fresh and distinctive today. I suggest any hip hop fans pick this up, because they won't be disappointed. December 19, 2006
| The Original Hip-Hop Stoners |
Cypress Hill are the original hip-hop stoners. The cartoony metaphors, cannabis lingo, contrasting two-man vocals, and wicked beats and sampling make this album a classic for the ages. Although harsh for some, the lyrics were true to the street culture of the early 90's and while a little exaggerated and boisterous, taking it over the top was Cypress's style. This album was put out in a time of fresh creativity in hip-hop, something that is lacking nowadays. Their style transcended racial barriers and got a lot of people into legitimate hip-hop. All 4 of Cypress Hill's first albums were instant hip-hop classics, and their live act was top-notch.
To me, in 1990's hip-hop, there were Cypress Hill and Wu-Tang Clan, and then there was everybody else. July 30, 2006
| Hip-hop Perfection |
| B, Sen & Muggs on a Debut Joint! |
Dr.Greenthumb's Soulja's best joints are *1, *2, *3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, *10, 11?, 12, 13, 14, 16 & 16. October 21, 2005
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