3 Feet High and Rising (Remastered) De La Soul

Album info

Album-Release:
1989

HRA-Release:
08.03.2019

Label: Tommy Boy Music

Genre: Hip-Hop

Artist: De La Soul

Album including Album cover

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  • 1 Intro 01:41
  • 2 The Magic Number 03:16
  • 3 Change In Speak 02:32
  • 4 Cool Breeze On The Rocks 00:48
  • 5 Can U Keep A Secret 01:40
  • 6 Jenifa Taught Me (Derwin’s Revenge) 03:25
  • 7 Ghetto Thang 03:35
  • 8 Transmitting Live From Mars 01:11
  • 9 Eye Know 04:13
  • 10 Take It Off 01:52
  • 11 A Little Bit Of Soap 00:56
  • 12 Tread Water 03:46
  • 13 Potholes In My Lawn 03:50
  • 14 Say No Go 04:20
  • 15 Do As De La Does 02:12
  • 16 Plug Tunin' (Last Chance To Comprehend) 04:06
  • 17 De La Orgee 01:13
  • 18 Buddy (feat. Jungle Brothers & Q-Tip) 04:54
  • 19 Description 01:31
  • 20 Me, Myself And I 03:50
  • 21 This Is A Recording 4 Living In A Fulltime Era (L.I.F.E.) 03:09
  • 22 I Can Do Anything (Delacratic) 00:41
  • 23 D.A.I.S.Y. Age 04:42
  • 24 Plug Tunin' (Original 12" Version) 03:46
  • Total Runtime 01:07:09

Info for 3 Feet High and Rising (Remastered)



Remastered: Double album of the Rap trio's genre-defining 1989 debut album.

"An acknowledged classic, De La Soul's debut album now resides in something of a vacuum. A little like Captain Beefheart's Trout Mask Replica, this is a record of such startling originality that was paradoxically to lead the band eventually down a creative dead end. The 'D.A.I.S.Y. Age' message of positivity (shared by fellow travellers like A Tribe Called Quest), was originally put forward as an answer to the increasingly violent, misogynistic world of rap. But one look around today seems to confirm that their message, while both intelligent and deftly put, fell on a lot of deaf ears. But for a brief spell, it looked like Posdnuos (Kelvin Mercer), Trugoy the Dove (David Jude Jolicoeur), and Pasemaster Mase (Vincent Mason) had shown the direction that hip hop should take.

While the 'concept' of the gameshow around which the album hangs (with producer, Prince Paul weighing in as well) was always a little tedious, what lies in between is still sparklingly different. Paul's use of samples from sources not usually associated with the genre (Steely Dan? Hall And Oates? The album's title was taken from a JOHNNY CASH song!) may seem ordinary now (Kanye West is still trying to convince us he's being original by using 70s AOR - pah), but at the time it was groundbreaking. Ironically it was also what led to the legal minefield that such snippets provide for each new hip hop album as The Turtles sued for the use of You Showed Me on Transmitting Live From Mars.

And what of the subject matter? Here the issues addressed are hippie philosophy (Tread Water), first love (Jenifa Taught Me (Derwin's Revenge)), drug abuse (Say No Go), body odour (A Little Bit Of Soap), and, amazingly for a rap record, self-doubt (Can U Keep A Secret). It was all delivered in that self-deprecating style with oodles of humour. And while the 'hippie' tag bothered the band for years, it was a palatable blend that could have taken rap beyond material gain and gang beefs. If only... (Chris Jones, BBC)

De La Soul

Digitally remastered

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