Because there are so many references and samples littered throughout the Beastie Boys landmark album, I'm not going through them all. There's a website I found a few years ago which will give you everything you want to know about the album. Paul's Boutique Website, everything you need to know about the album is....here.
When I first remember hearing the album, it was in the summer of 1989 riding around with friends. The album was an astonishing step up from their breakthrough "Licensed To Ill". Lyrically, MCA, Mike D and Ad-Rock were rapping about everything...in a completely intelligent way. In retrospect, the growth in maturity is astronomical between albums. Without it, they would have undoubtedly wallowed in self parody by 1993, if they even lasted that long. There were characters you were familiar with and characters you learned about (Saduhara Oh comes to mind first).The way the three interacted with each other throughout the album brought a whole new definition to the definition of carefree. But yet it was complex and ever so sprawling at the same time. The insertions of pop culture icons and other song lyrics throughout their songs were fantastic, done like no one ever had before or rarely have since. It was the cornerstone to a decade that followed it that swam in pop culture references. We have three emcees to thank for that.
photo courtesy: magnetmagazine.com |
From what I remember though, the album was a major commercial disappointment at the time of its release. The record company was hoping for "Licensed To Ill" type numbers and the album didn't fare anywhere near as well as its predecessor. It instead weeded out a lot of the jocks and sorority girls who loved the party anthems on "Licensed To Ill". And let's face it, the party jams on both albums are stellar, but "Paul's Boutique" was much more diverse and challenging to wrap your head around on first listen. This was an album that required dedication from the listener and those who finally got it stand by it religiously for many good reasons.
courtesy: thedaysoflore.com |
That's pretty much the history as I see it. But if you are a faithful, I'm preaching to the choir...or the congregation...or however that saying goes.
Here are some of my favorite moments and lyrics on the album:
Shake Your Rump: "Got more rhymes than Jamaica got Mango Kangols" and "Like Fred Flintstone driving around with bald feet"
Johnny Ryall: "Sleepin' on the street in a cardboard box, He's better off drinkin' than smokin' the rocks"
Eggman: Curtis Mayfield's "The Pusherman" in the verses, Sly and the Family Stone's "Dance To The Music" in the break, just wonderful.
High Plains Drifter: "Bust a Travis Bickle when I feel that I'm getting pushed"
Sounds Of Science: "Dropping science like when Galileo dropped his orange" and the Beatles "The End"
Hey Ladies: "Sucking down pints till I didn't know, Woke up in the morning with a one ton hoe"
Looking Down The Barrel Of A Gun: "Ultra violence running through my head, Fuzzy navel y'all making me see red." And of course, the two second sample of Mountain's "Mississippi Queen.
What Comes Around: "Rapunzel Rapunzel let down your hair, So I can climb up and get into your underwear"
Shadrach: Figuring out the beat was "Hot 'n Nasty" from Black Oak Arkansas, a rare album my dad owned was awesome. "More Adidas sneakers that a plumber got pliers, Got more suites that Jacoby & Meyers"
B-Boy Bouillabaisse: The whole suite. Favorites are "Stop That Train" and "Hello Brooklyn".
Plus the bookends of "To All The Girls" and the two very short skit/instrumentals (the way a hip hop album should operate) are great too.
So this weekend, make it a "Shadrach" weekend. Savor the rich moments which made "Paul's Boutique" one of the best hip/hop albums of all time. If you've got the deluxe edition bust it out. Or if you've got a rough old copy like I own, bust it out. Or bust it out on your digital music player. Because musically, life would be a lot more boring if this album was never created. Essential in every way.
Source: http://www.jhostation.com/2011/03/beastie-boys-pauls-boutique-jho-hall-of.html
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