LP
AOI: BIONIX
DE LA SOUL
CHRYSALIS · 2023
Gratis bezorging · Besteed je €75 of meer
Details
| Artiest | DE LA SOUL |
| Label | CHRYSALIS |
| Releasedatum | 15-09-2023 |
| Herkomst | NL |
| Format | LP (2) |
| Gewicht | 260 gram |
| Item-nr | 4534505 · EAN 0810098503051 |
Tracklist
26 tracks
26 tracks
Disc 1
1.1
Intro
1.2
Bionix
1.3
Baby Phat
1.4
Simply
1.5
Simply Havin'
1.6
Held Down
1.7
Rev. Do Good # 1
1.8
Watch Out
1.9
Special
1.10
Rev. Do Good # 2
1.11
The Sauce
1.12
Am I Worth You?
1.13
Pawn Star
1.14
What We Do (For Love)
1.15
Rev. Do Good #3
1.16
Peer Pressure
1.17
It's American
1.18
Trying People
Disc 2
2.1
The Sauce
2.2
Am I Worth You?
2.3
Pawn Star
2.4
What We Do (For Love)
2.5
Rev. Do Good #3
2.6
Peer Pressure
2.7
It's American
2.8
Trying People
Over dit album
AOI: BIONIX
"AOI: Bionix" is the sixth full album by De La Soul, released on December 4, 2001.
The first single, "Baby Phat" featuring Yummy Bingham and Devin the Dude, was an ode to overweight women.
On "Held Down," featuring Cee-Lo, Posdnuos was in an introspective mood, reflecting on fatherhood, religion and fame. Slick Rick also made an appearance on "What We Do (For Love)," a humorous song about puberty and sexual discovery. The album featured skits with a character named Reverend Do Good, who served as social commentary as well as intro and and outros to the songs. The final skit featuring Reverend Do Good acts as a sort of final advertisement for Ghost Weed, as was the case on De La Soul's previous album, Art Official Intelligence: Mosaic Thump. A mischievous teenager takes a hit of the Substance and then transforms into Slum Village frontman J Dilla, who took the intro and outro of the marijuana song "Peer Pressure" (which he also produced), took over.
The first single, "Baby Phat" featuring Yummy Bingham and Devin the Dude, was an ode to overweight women.
On "Held Down," featuring Cee-Lo, Posdnuos was in an introspective mood, reflecting on fatherhood, religion and fame. Slick Rick also made an appearance on "What We Do (For Love)," a humorous song about puberty and sexual discovery. The album featured skits with a character named Reverend Do Good, who served as social commentary as well as intro and and outros to the songs. The final skit featuring Reverend Do Good acts as a sort of final advertisement for Ghost Weed, as was the case on De La Soul's previous album, Art Official Intelligence: Mosaic Thump. A mischievous teenager takes a hit of the Substance and then transforms into Slum Village frontman J Dilla, who took the intro and outro of the marijuana song "Peer Pressure" (which he also produced), took over.
Door Redactie
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