Welcome To Detroit

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (59 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 40:54

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Rest In Power

monkeymaster

it's jay dilla doing his thanfg again, the man is a genius. the written intro makes me laugh a little''Frequently and rightly placed in the same context as DJ Premier, Pete Rock, and Kanye West'' Kanye? Rightly placed next to Kanye? Kanye should be over the f'n moon that he's mentioned in the same breath as Jay Dee, lets get that the right way around. Rest In Power.

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Big Booty Express

ArmondoMfume

This is one of Dilla's best!

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The illest ever.

Abeltothpal

Welcome 2 Detroit is in my ears the best produced hip-hop album ever. J Dillas touch is beautifully mad. The drums, the bass, the strings, the sensitive trumpets to those dirty synths. His voice as an instrument. From the finest of soul to the rawest of funk. Uhh, feel it! Genius.

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They Say All Media Guide

Jay Dee made a name for himself as one-third of A Tribe Called Quest’s beat-making faction (the Ummah). Thanks to his work on Common’s critically acclaimed Like Water for Chocolate and Q-Tip’s post-Quest endeavor Amplified, Dee has also established himself as a hip-hop super-producer. While Dee’s stock continues to rise (working with Janet Jackson, Erykah Badu, and Macy Gray), his underground projects have been less fruitful. Reason being, when it comes to enlisting new MCs to collaborate with, Dee has yet to locate a lyricist capable of augmenting his sublime production. This fact became apparent during Dee’s short-lived stint as a member of Slum Village, and the trend continues with his first solo outing, Welcome 2 Detroit. Here, Dee continues to showcase a diverse assortment of sensuous melodies and booming funk samples. The Detroit-bred MCs who Dee chooses to highlight — Phat Kat on “Rico Suave Bossa Nova” and Beej on “Beej-N-Dem, Pt. 2″ prove to be very mediocre lyricists. Yet Dee did manage to round up a few hometown prospects, as Frank N Dank liven up “Pause” and Elzhi rips a few furious verses on “Come Get It.” Though Dee flips a few clumsy bars as well, Welcome 2 Detroit really takes off when he sticks solely to an instrumental script, retouching trumpeter Donald Byrd’s “Think Twice” and transforming Kraftwerk’s indelible “Trans-Europe Express” into the strippers’-anthem-in-waiting “B.B.E. (Big Booty Express).” – Matt Conaway

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