3 Feet High and Rising
From Free net encyclopedia
Template:Album infobox 3 Feet High and Rising is the debut album from American hip hop trio De La Soul.
Contents |
Overview
Released amid the 1989 boom in gangsta rap, which gravitated towards hardcore, confrontational, violent lyrics, De La Soul's uniquely positive style made them an oddity beginning with the first single, "Me, Myself and I". Their positivity meant many observors labeled them a "hippie" group, based on their declaration of the "D.A.I.S.Y. Age" (da inner sound, y'all). Sampling artists as diverse as Johnny Cash, Hall & Oates, Steely Dan's "Peg" and The Turtles, 3 Feet High and Rising is often viewed as the stylistic beginning of 1990s alternative hip hop (and especially jazz rap). Of particular importance is the production by Prince Paul, who would become one of hip hop's hottest producers on the strength of this album. While sampling was hardly new, 3 Feet High and Rising revolutionized the technique and influenced virtually every producer and artist to come later.
The Music
Lyrically, the album was incredibly unusual for its time. Even beside its revolutionary exhortation for peace and harmony, many of the songs are extremely personal and heartfelt recountings of early sexual intercourse ("Jenifa Taught Me"), love ("Eye Know") and insecurity regarding personal appearance and fashion ("Can U Keep a Secret", "A Little Bit of Soap" "Take It Off"). With the exception of "Do As De La Does", there is no profanity on the album, in stark contrast to most hip hop albums from the time period. "Jenifa Taught Me", "Tread Water" and "The D.A.I.S.Y. Age" are three of De La Soul's most popular songs among their fans. Many of the lyrics are humorous and/or nonsensical ("Sun, ceiling/Ceiling connects to the sun, burning inside everyone, on a side Plug-a-fied sire/One million/Demonstrations have been heard, my hair burns when I'm referred/Kid shouts my roof is on fire/Go dancing/Dancing like a bandit, psychics try to stand it, keep it up until they burn a cell/Ro-mancing/Romancing dialect in shows, Posdnous creating flow, you say you didn't know/Oh well, it's a D.A.I.S.Y. age."), and are inventive and original, stylistic predecessors of MF Doom and Busta Rhymes; Posdnous compares the rhymes to dance in "The Magic Number" ("the phrasing Fred Astaires"). Many of the listeners who compared the group to hippies criticized the album for a childlike, simple approach at complex issues, as on "Tread Water", where a series of animals exhort the listener to maintain a positive mental attitude. Supporters point to songs like "Say No Go" as a realistic portrayal of the pitfalls of drug abuse (the title is a reference to Nancy Reagan's "Just Say No" campaign. Posdnous criticizes Reagan, but applauds the sentiment); the song was deeply personal for Posdnous, whose own brother was addicted to crack cocaine.
The first track, entitled "Intro", is a skit that takes place at a game show. The contestants (the three members of De La Soul plus producer Prince Paul) are asked four questions by the host (Al Watts), and their attempts at answering are scattered about the album. The song "Ghetto Thang" is one of the few non-positive tracks on the album. It is a sad story about poverty and other social ills, even though De La Soul is from middle-class suburb Amityville, New York (on Long Island). Its denunciation of ghetto violence can be summed up in the words "Ghetto gained a ghetto name from ghetto ways/Now there must be ghetto gangs and ghetto play/If ghetto thing can have its way in ghetto rage/Then there must be some ghetto love and ghetto change". "Description" describes each member of De La Soul, and a few others, in five lines each, the style reminiscent of a limerick.
Reviews
On the Billboard Music Charts, 3 Feet High and Rising hit #1 R&B/Hip hop and #24 in the Top 200. NME (One of the greatest albums ever made), Village Voice (the Sgt. Pepper of hip hop), Spex (also #5 on the top 100 Albums of the Century) and Face magazines named 3 Feet High and Rising the top album of 1989, while Rolling Stone placed it at #5, HUMO at #12, OOR at #8, Record Mirror at #2, Sounds at #4 and Melody Maker at #10. It also made it on Rolling Stones' 200 Essential Rock Records and The Source's 100 Best Rap Albums (both of which are unordered).
When Village Voice held its annual Pazz & Jop Critics Poll for 1989, 3 Feet High and Rising was ranked at #1, outdistancing its nearest opponent (Neil Young's Freedom) by 21 votes and 260 points.
"An inevitable development in the class history of rap, [De La Soul is] new wave to Public Enemy's punk," wrote critic Robert Christgau in his Consumer Guide column's review of 3 Feet High and Rising. "Their music is also radically unlike any rap you or anybody else has ever heard - inspirations include the Jarmels and a learn-it-yourself French record. And for all their kiddie consciousness, junk-culture arcana, and suburban in-jokes, they're in the new tradition - you can dance to them, which counts for plenty when disjunction is your problem."
Rolling Stone magazine gave the album three stars and concluded that it was "(o)ne of the most original rap records ever to come down the pike, the inventive, playful 3 Feet High and Rising stands staid rap conventions on their def ear".
It was ranked 88th in a 2005 survey held by British television's Channel 4 to determine the 100 greatest albums of all time. Template:RS500
Trivia
- Though the idea was quickly abandoned, the original concept behind the group was that Mase was PA and Posdnuos and Dove were the microphone plugs, transmitting messages from Mars. This is the origin of the nicknames for Posdnuos and Dove, Plug One and Plug Two, respectively.
- The Turtles won a lawsuit against De La Soul over the unauthorized sampling of "You Showed Me" on "Transmitting Live from Mars".
- The title 3 Feet High and Rising comes from a Johnny Cash song called "Five Feet High and Rising" ("How high's the water, Mama?/It's three feet high and rising"). Cash is sampled on the album. Some have interpreted the title as a reference to drug abuse; De La Soul has not commented on this interpretation.
- The members of the group have said that the only thing they would change about 3 Feet High and Rising is the cover, because the light-hearted colors do not mesh well with their somber faces.
Track listing
Album
Side One
- "Intro" (1:41) - (Huston/Mason/Mercer/Patterson/Scipio/Trugoy the Dove)
- "The Magic Number" (3:16) - (Becker/Fagen/Huston/Mason/Mercer/Trugoy the Dove)
- "Change in Speak" (2:33) - (Allen/Hall/Huston/Mason/Mercer/Oates/Scipio/Trugoy the Dove)
- "Cool Breeze on the Rocks" (0:47) - (Mercer/Trugoy the Dove)
- "Can U Keep a Secret?" (1:40) - (Hall/Huston/Mason/Mercer/Q Tip/Small/Trugoy the Dove)
- "Jenifa Taught Me (Derwin's Revenge)" (3:25) - (Q Tip)
- "Ghetto Thang" (3:35) - (Clinton/Huston/Mason/Mercer/Trugoy the Dove/Wynn)
- "Transmitting Live from Mars" (1:11) - (Huston/Mason/Mercer/Trugoy the Dove)
- "Eye Know" (4:13) - (Huston/Mason/Mercer/Trugoy the Dove)
- "Take It Off" (1:52) - (Huston/Mason/Mercer/Trugoy the Dove)
- "A Little Bit of Soap" (0:49) - (Huston/Mason/Mercer/Trugoy the Dove)
- "Tread Water" (3:52) - (Huston/Mason/Mercer/Trugoy the Dove)
- "Potholes in My Lawn" (3:50) - (Huston/Mason/Mercer/Trugoy the Dove)
Side Two
- "Say No Go" (4:20) - (Huston/Mason/Trugoy the Dove/Trugoy the Dove)
- "Do as De La Does" (2:06) - (Huston/Mason/Mercer/Trugoy the Dove)
- "Plug Tunin'" (4:12) - (Huston/Mason/Mercer/Trugoy the Dove)
- "De la Orgee" (1:13) - (Huston/Mason/Mercer/Trugoy the Dove)
- "Buddy" (with Jungle Brothers, Q-Tip, Queen Latifah, Monie Love) (4:54)
- "Description" (1:31) - (Huston/Mason/Mercer/Trugoy the Dove)
- "Me, Myself and I" (3:40) - (Pasemaster Mase/Posdnuos/Prince Paul/Trugoy the Dove)
- "This Is a Recording 4 Living in a Fulltime (L.I.F.E.)" (3:19) - (Huston/Mason/Mercer/Trugoy the Dove)
- "I Can Do Anything (Delacratic)" (0:41) - (Huston/Mason/Mercer/Trugoy the Dove)
- "D.A.I.S.Y. Age" (4:42) - (Huston/Mason/Mercer/Trugoy the Dove)
- "Plug Tunin'" [Original 12" Version] (3:43) - (Huston/Mason/Mercer/Trugoy the Dove)
Bonus Compact Disc
When Tommy Boy Records re-issued 3 Feet High and Rising on October 23, 2001, initial pressings included this compact disc as a companion. It mainly featured B side tracks, alternate versions of album tracks and skits that would later impact other De La Soul albums.
- "Freedom of Speak (We Got Three Minutes)" (2:59)
- "Strickly Dan Stuckie" (0:42)
- "Jenifa (Taught Me)" [12" Version] (4:42)
- "Skip To My Loop" (1:12)
- "Potholes in My Lawn" [12" Version] (3:46)
- "Me, Myself & I" [Oblapos Mode] (3:31)
- "Ain't Hip to be Labeled a Hippie" (1:50)
- "What's More (From the Soundtrack Hell of 1st Avenue)" (2:05)
- "Brain Washed Follower" (2:49)
- "Say No Go" [New Keys Vocal] (4:45)
- "The Mack Daddy on the Left" (2:31)
- "Double Huey Skit" (3:52)
- "Ghetto Thang" [Ghetto Ximer] (3:52)
- "Eye Know" [The Know It All Mix] (7:12)
List of Samples
The following is a list of songs and sound footage sampled in the songs on 3 Feet High and Rising.
Album Samples
The Magic Number
- Schoolhouse Rock song "Three is the Magic Number"
- "The Crunge" by Led Zeppelin
- "Five Feet High and Rising" by Johnny Cash
- Eddie Murphy dialogue
- Bill Cosby dialogue
Change in Speak
- James Brown song (unknown)
- "Bra" by Cymande
Cool Breeze On The Rocks
- "Hit It Run" by Run-D.M.C.
- "Rock With You" by Michael Jackson
Transmitting Live from Mars
- old, unknown French-education recording
- "You Showed Me" by The Turtles
Eye Know
- "Sitting on (The Dock of the Bay)" by Otis Redding
- "Peg" by Steely Dan
A Little Bit of Soap
Say No Go
- "I Can't Go For That (No Can Do)" by Hall & Oates
De La Orgee
Plug Tunin' (Last Chance to Comprehend)
- intro by Liberace
Me, Myself and I
- "(Not Just) Knee Deep" by Funkadelic
Bonus Compact Disc Samples
Freedom of Speak (We Got Three Minutes)
- "Pass the Peas" by The JB's
Personnel
- Jungle Brothers - Performer
- De La Soul - Arranger, Assistant Producer
- Prince Paul - Arranger, Producer, Mixing
- Q-Tip - Performer
- Sue Fisher - Engineer
- Trugoy the Dove - Arranger
- Bob Coulter - Engineer
- Al Watts - Mixing
- Steven Miglio - Layout Design
Charting singles
1989 Me Myself And I The Billboard Hot 100 No. 34 1989 Me Myself And I Hot Rap Singles No. 1 1989 Potholes In My Lawn Hot Rap Singles No. 22 1989 Say No Go Hot Rap Singles No. 11 1989 Me Myself And I Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks No. 1 1989 Say No Go Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks No. 32 1989 Me Myself And I Hot Dance Music/Club Play No. 1 1989 Say No Go Hot Dance Music/Club Play No. 3 1989 Me Myself And I Hot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles Sales No. 1 1989 Say No Go Hot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles Sales No. 13 1990 Buddy Hot Rap Singles No. 2 1990 Buddy Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks No. 18 1990 Buddy Hot Dance Music/Club Play No. 27 1990 Buddy Hot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles Sales No. 11