The Unseen (album)
| The Unseen | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
||||
| Studio album by Quasimoto | ||||
| Released | June 13, 2000 | |||
| Recorded | 1999 | |||
| Genre | Alternative hip hop, jazz rap, underground hip hop, West Coast hip hop | |||
| Length | 63:09 | |||
| Label | Stones Throw Records | |||
| Producer | Madlib | |||
| Quasimoto chronology | ||||
|
||||
The Unseen is the debut album by Quasimoto, an alter ego of producer Madlib.
Contents |
[edit] Release history
The album was conceived and recorded by Madlib during a week long psilocybin mushroom binge.[1]
Upon its release in 2000, it received much praise from underground heads and from mainstream media, making it onto Spin Magazine's top albums of the year list.
It was re-released in 2005 as a Deluxe Edition with a bonus CD containing the instrumental version of the album.
[edit] Reviews
| Professional ratings | |
|---|---|
| Review scores | |
| Source | Rating |
| Allmusic | |
| Pitchfork Media | (8.5/10.0)[3] |
| RapReviews.com | |
"The Unseen is a scorched chocolate coated valley scattered with 'shrooms and smoker's debris that astro-travels way beyond the unchartered hinterlands of Hip-Hop, not unlike De La's 3 Feet High and Rising once did." -Dan Stacey[5]
Rhapsody (online music service) ranked the album #7 on its "Hip-Hop’s Best Albums of the Decade" list.[6] "Madlib and alter ego Quasimoto take a weird, tangential and nuanced journey through the day in the life of a blunted b-boy. The production revisits Prince Paul's sampledelica, while Id surrogate Quas raps about hos and blunts. This is what happens when hip-hop's tightly wound world collides with psych's expansive inner-space. In a word: classic."
[edit] Jazz Cats Pt. 1
On the song "Jazz Cats Pt. 1", Madlib lists various Jazz musicians and record labels who have influenced him. They are, in order:
Sun Ra, George Benson, Hampton Hawes, Steve Kuhn, George Cables, Cedar Walton, Herbie Hancock, Gene Harris, Three Sounds, Bobby Hutcherson, Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers, Horace Silver, Bill Evans, Terry Gibbs, Gary Burton, Donald Byrd, George Duke, Lee Morgan, Shirley Scott, Groove Holmes, Jimmy Smith, Gene Russell, Art Ensemble of Chicago, Michael White, Cal Tjader, Weather Report, Max Roach, Freddie Hubbard, Cannonball Adderley, Eddie Harris, Milt Jackson, Ron Carter, Rahsaan Roland Kirk, William Fisher, John Coltrane, Gary Bartz, Kool & the Gang, Modern Jazz Quartet, Johnny Hammond, Pharoah Sanders, Paul Bley, Thelonious Monk, Norman Connors, Albert Ayler, McCoy Tyner, Dizzy Gillespie, Don Sebesky, Blue Note Records, Black Jazz Records, Impulse! Records, CTI Records, Verve Records, Milestone Records, Atlantic Records, Muse Records, and David Sanborn.
Though this song is curiously absent of any direct reference to jazz legend Miles Davis, the song Axe Puzzles contains many of his song titles as lyrics such as Bitches Brew and Spanish Key.
[edit] Track listing
- "Welcome to Violence" – 0:49
- Contains a sample from Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill! (film) by Russ Meyer
- "Bad Character" – 1:56
- Contains a sample from: "I'm a Bad Character" by Melvin Van Peebles[7]
- "Microphone Mathematics" – 3:14
- Contains a sample from: "The Bizness" by De La Soul
- Contains a sample from: "Complete Communion" by Don Cherry[8]
- "Basic Instinct" – 2:10
- Contains a sample from: "Top Billin'" by Audio Two
- "Goodmorning Sunshine" – 2:57
- Contains a sample from: "Unfinished Melody" by Augustus Pablo
- Contains a sample from: "Back in the Country" by Hurricane Smith[9]
- "Discipline 99, Pt. 0 (featuring Mr. Herb)" – 2:32
- Contains a sample from: "Two Little Boys" by The Last Poets
- Contains a sample from: "Harlem Medley" by Galt MacDermot
- "Low Class Conspiracy" – 2:26
- Contains a sample from: "Mellow Mood" by Jimmy Smith and Wes Montgomery
- Also featured in Tony Hawk's Underground.
- "Return of the Loop Digga" – 3:46
- Contains a sample from: "Fragments Of Fear" by Johnny Harris
- Contains a sample from: "North, East, South, West" performed by Kool & the Gang
- Contains a sample from: "Oneness of Juju" by African Rhythms[10]
- Contains a sample from: "Supermarket Blues" by Eugene McDaniels
- Contains a sample from: "Holy Are You" by David Axelrod
- Contains a sample from: "Stockyard" by Galt MacDermot
- Contains a sample from: "Tital Wave" by Ronnie Laws
- "Real Eyes" – 3:22
- Intro clip from: "Freestyle (Ice Cream)" performed by Canibus
- Samples "Accadde A Bali" performed by Arawak
- Contains a sample from: "Dope Pusher Song" by Bill Cosby
- "Come on Feet" – 3:35
- Contains a sample from: Fantastic Planet (film) by Alain Goraguer
- Contains a sample from: "C'Mon Feet" by Melvin Van Peebles[11]
- Contains a sample from: "Sensitize" by Roy Ayers[12]
- "Bluffin" – 2:47
- Contains a sample from: "Extensions" by Ahmad Jamal
- Contains a sample from: "Track the Movement" by Lord Finesse
- "Boom Music" – 2:47
- Contains a sample from: "A Day In The Life" by Diamond D and the Psychotic Neurotics
- Contains a sample from: "May I Baby" by Sam & Dave[13]
- "MHBs" – 2:02
- Contains a sample from: "Little Children" by Kool & the Gang[14]
- "Put a Curse on You" – 1:46
- Samples the production music from the series Scooby Doo, Where Are You?
- "Astro Black" – 3:17
- Contains a sample from: "Woman to Woman" by Joe Cocker[15]
- "Green Power" – 2:59
- "Jazz Cats, Pt. 1" – 2:43
- "24-7 (featuring Medaphoar)" – 2:48
- Contains a sample from: "False Rasta" by Jacob Miller
- Contains a sample from: "When You're Alone" by The Dells[17]
- Contains a sample from: "Celestial Blues" by Andy Bey[18]
- "The Unseen" – 2:53
- Contains a sample from: "Bubble Gum" by 9th Creation[19]
- Contains a sample from: "California Soul" by Marlena Shaw[20]
- Contains a sample from: "The Signs pt II" by David Axelrod[21]
- "Phony Game" – 1:56
- Contains a sample from: "The Phoney Game" by Melvin Van Peebles[22]
- "Astro Travellin" – 2:58
- Contains a sample from: "It Ain't Hard to Tell" by Nas
- "Blitz" – 1:16
- Contains a sample from: "MacArthur Park" by Maynard Ferguson
- "Axe Puzzles" – 2:34
- Contains a sample from: "Keep The faith" performed by Mel & Tim
- "Discipline 99, Pt. 1 (featuring Wildchild)" – 3:36
- Contains a sample from: "Future Shock (Dance Your Pants Off)" performed by The J.B.'s
- Contains a sample from: "Flip The Script" by Gang Starr
- Contains a sample from: "I Used To Love H.E.R" by Common (entertainer)
- Contains a sample from: "Ain't No Half Steppin'" by Big Daddy Kane
[edit] References
- ^ Stones Throw Records
- ^ Allmusic review
- ^ Pitchfork Media review
- ^ RapReviews.com review
- ^ Stones Throw Records
- ^ "Hip-Hop’s Best Albums of the Decade" Retrieved 12 January 2010.
- ^ The History of Sampling v. 1.3
- ^ The History of Sampling v. 1.3
- ^ The History of Sampling v. 1.3
- ^ The History of Sampling v. 1.3
- ^ The History of Sampling v. 1.3
- ^ The History of Sampling v. 1.3
- ^ [1]
- ^ The History of Sampling v. 1.3
- ^ The History of Sampling v. 1.3
- ^ The History of Sampling v. 1.3
- ^ The History of Sampling v. 1.3
- ^ The History of Sampling v. 1.3
- ^ The History of Sampling v. 1.3
- ^ The History of Sampling v. 1.3
- ^ The History of Sampling v. 1.3
- ^ The History of Sampling v. 1.3
