Welcome

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (82 ratings)
Welcome album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 42:12

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clear way for the real pimp

Major_Malfunction

Hehe... this music is... GREAT! It has this really grungy-sleazy-disco vibe, i play it all the time when i drive around in my car. Like, really loud and driving slow, pushing it to all my friends and so, then i say: hey man, check this out, it's ehh... like really funky disco shit, it's stupid but in a great way. Some of the tracks also have hit-potential i think. The production is a little lo-fi, it deserves much better!

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Pants is right

musicjay1967

Just to let you Americans know, In England, pants is a synonym of rubbish, or trash, or shit. E.g:"Yo, Randy, you heard that album Welcome?" "Hehe, that album is pants, Dog! Lemme take a sip of my coke" Shrlurrrrp!

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get this!

jermface

A refreshing take on the meaning of pimp.

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The most interesting, exciting album of the year.

Needlz

Well, he did it. This is the dopest frikkin record i've heard in a while. It's like being stoned in the trashcan outside the most exclusive club in 1983, and you discover there's a hot girl hiding in the trashcan with you, and then you get it on. It's like that. Check out "We're through" if you still doubt Mr. Pants' power.

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Come on...

akole822

...last name is pants, for cryin' out loud.

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A true gem!!!

jaserankin

A diamond in the rough that is emusic. Well worth whatever downloads you've got, this band proves that it is versatile and not over-produced. It's 'chunky' sounds can be held onto and grooved around while relaxing or partying on into the night. Just take a listen and you'll agree.

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Really great album overall

gjg

A lot of fantastic sounds and great beats. Cosmic rapp and Theme from Paris are my current favorites... Highly recommended!

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They Say All Music Guide

Ex-marching band drummer-turned DJ-turned producer from Spokane, WA, James Pants explains the spirit of his first full-length — on the same label responsible for breaking underground hip-hop mavericks Madlib, J Dilla, and Guilty Simpson — by saying, “It’s just the sound of really cheap equipment, listening to a lot of records, and goofing off.” Left of center even by Stones Throw’s eclectic standards, Welcome isn’t a hip-hop release, per se. Instead, it appropriates and revitalizes electro sounds of the ’80s, adding elements of soul, new wave, post-punk, and techno along the way. Made up of primarily old-school sounds from vintage synths and drum machines that he scored from thrift stores, Pants played the remaining drum, keyboard, bass, and guitar parts himself in his garage studio, and the record sounds remarkably true to the era that he’s emulating, mainly due to his pile of analog gear. “Cosmic Rapp” is flavored with claps from a Roland CR-8000 CompuRhythm, gummy synth-bass, and robo-vocals sung through a vocoder, turning it into a pop-locking jam worthy of a block party DJ set, right between Whodini’s “Five Minutes of Funk” and Newcleus’ “Jam on It.” While carbonated synth gurgles and 808 beats are the heart of the first couple tracks, other cuts are more progressive. “My Girl” and “Finger on the Knife” are drum-heavy shout-alongs that share more in common with indie rock than indie rap, and “Crystal Lite” and “Ka$H” (which both feature soul singer Deacon Leon Davis) could practically be Gnarls Barkley B-sides. Unfortunately, consistency isn’t Pants’ strong point, and the latter half of the CD falters with a spattering of sparse instrumentals that feel more like skeletal after-thoughts than fully developed creations. At the grandest moments, Pants accomplishes his mission of re-creating the dance-happy fun funk of Chromeo and Cameo, and the cardboard-spinning electro boogie of Arabian Prince and Egyptian Lover. If you’re feeling retro, you can’t ask for much more than that. – Jason Lymangrover

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