B Ball Zombie War

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B Ball Zombie War album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 20   Total Length: 58:12

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Amelia Raitt

eMusic Contributor

Amelia Raitt is a former writer for the television program Mr. Belvedere and has been writing about pop music of all colors and stripes for eMusic since 2005. S...more »

04.22.11
Peanut Butter Wolf, B Ball Zombie War
Label: Stones Throw

Madlib may be the Stones Throw label's star producer, but Peanut Butter Wolf is it's secret weapon. His knowledge of classic soul and hip-hop is dizzying; the mixtapes he releases on the sly play like exhilarating tutorials in whole chunks of music history (if you're at a Stones Throw show any time soon, don't leave without a copy of Wolf's Ladies First). His curation of B Ball Zombie War is exceptional, collecting millions of disparate sources into a druggy, dreamy whole. All of the vocalists on B Ball Zombie War bring (pardon the pun) their A-Game; the normally stodgy MED punches holes through the center of the spirited "Break it Down" and Q-Tip and Talib Kweli justify their reputations on the clattering "Ligthworking." All in all, another three-pointer for Stones Throw.

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19 out of 20 bangers...

chobrada

Skip track 16 unless your into little kids rapping. Sounds like it would be better suited for Sesame Street than placed in the mix with the rest of these gems. Minus that track this is a 5 star album.

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AWESOME!

DJJAMAL

Awesome! Simply awesome! No other way to put it. Every track on here is a banger. It is official! Stones Throw is here to save the day for rap music (Check out iTunes for the instrumental version).

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Awesome comp

ArmondoMfume

There are some of Dilla's Donuts & Dr No's Oxperiments on here with Stones Throw MCs spitting over them. Search iTunes podcasts for Stones Throw and you can download for free a 30 min mix of this album mixed by PB Wolf himself...Supreme Team and Guilty are gonna drop full albums later this year, hell yeah.

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They Say All Music Guide

Peanut Butter Wolf has proved he’s an all-star as a producer, but his 2K8 collection shows that he commands so much respect that he can stock a full hour with exclusives or near-exclusives from the best producers in hip-hop. Part of a collaboration between Stones Throw, one of the best labels in hip-hop, and sports video-game maker Take Two, 2K8: BBall Zombie War finds Wolf rolling out a raft of tracks that make this compilation much more than just a co-branding opportunity. (The tracks were also slotted to appear in some of Take Two’s games.) Most importantly, the late and lamented J Dilla appears three times, first on “Lightworking” with features for Talib Kweli and Q-Tip (driven by a Raymond Scott sample, no less); second with MF Doom and Guilty Simpson on “Mash’s Revenge”; and finally, with a Jaylib remix of Quasimoto’s “Hydrant Game.” Madlib has even more appearances, including the opener, a debut for his project with Karriem Riggins called Supreme Team; an unreleased Madlib track called “The Wigflip”; the aforementioned Quasimoto/Jaylib remix; and a Beat Konducta joint called “Trouble.” Aside from the veterans, a few relative newcomers make almost as much noise — Aloe Blacc’s “Find a Way” is a smooth and spacious contemporary R&B production that balances all the hip-hop on display, while the lurching electro production on Dam-Funk’s “Sidewayz” would do Madlib proud. The new project James Pants has the track “Ka$h” remixed (by PBW himself) into an ’80s video-game soundtrack by way of Prince, but funniest (if not best) of all is Niko’s childish (literally) rap over a DJ Babu beat on “Now You Know.” As usual with undie rap, the tracks are driven by more Sesame Street- and Electric Company-related samples than anyone could count, but this is one of the prime rap compilations of the year. – John Bush

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