Chrome Children

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (107 ratings)
Chrome Children album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 19   Total Length: 57:39

eMusic Review 0

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J. Edward Keyes

Editor-in-Chief

J. Edward Keyes has been writing about music for nearly 15 years, a fact he occasionally finds terrifying. His work has appeared in Rolling Stone, the Village V...more »

04.22.11
Indie rappers channel their inner cartoon character
Label: Stones Throw

Other backpack hip-hop labels maximize in glitched-out electronic and vulgar synthesized squelches, but California label Stones Throw knows the foundation of hip-hop starts with classic soul. The label celebrated their 10th anniversary in '06, and Chrome Children, a partnership with the Adult Swim division of the Cartoon Network, is both a handy summary and field guide to the label's future. Building tracks from cut-up samples and timeless boom-bap, artists like Oh No and Madlib and crooner Dudley Perkins create songs that are full of fire and spirit and — above all else — soul.

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Turn Around

Bubby

Is stuck in my head...The vocals are annoying, the music is repetitive and I can't stop playing it.

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Bought the Instrumental!

pwenzel

Stones Throw is the cat's pajamas. I bought this MP3 release after first purchasing the instrumental version on vinyl. Make sure to check out Chrome Children Volume 2 as well!

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nuggets 2 be found!

Diablo269

Definitely sift through the samples-you will find some nug's here! Standouts are tracks #6,10,13 and 18.With #13 being some of da' funkiest sheeyot I've heard in awhile!

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new raw talent

marz27

Some of these cats were new to me and they had my head bobbin.The ish is tight.

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1 star reviewer is an idiot

bastard.noise

Nothing like this is a fucking awesome track. go fuck yourself

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very good

arton

This is a very good album in classic Stone's Throw form. Some people might not get it at first, either too impatient or immature I guess. King Kai above will most likely feel like an imbecile when he realizes how good it is in a month or two. Not only is Jay Dilla's "Nothing Like This" very good, it is quite original and took me by suprise (no reason to piss on his grave like Kai). And Doom's rhyming on Monkey Suite is exceptional.

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he sampled it - duh

bigjay

In answer to the reviewer above who wondered why RJD2's Clean Living sounds like Third Rock: He sampled it.

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Worst album on EMUSIC

KAI

"Nothing Like This" is the worst song I have ever heard. Tug away to it bastard.noise.

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Third Rock by Pure essence

DJDookieButt

The track "Third Rock" IS EXACTLY THE SAME as RJD2's "Clean Living" (also on eMusic), just different lyrics, WHAT THE @#%$@%$! IS UP WITH THAT???

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They Say All Music Guide

Despite the fact that the album is released in association with [adult swim], the Cartoon Network program that helped to bring the world the Danger Doom Mouse and the Mask album in 2005, there are no rapping cartoons on Chrome Children. The record, in fact, is much more a celebration of Stones Throw’s ten years as a label than any sort of collaboration with animated characters. Label founder Peanut Butter Wolf shows off much of his roster with (mainly) unreleased tracks, including J Dilla’s stellar and melancholic “Nothing Like This.” Besides the late artist, who performs on and/or produces a handful of other songs, label superstar Madlib is also a major player on the record, appearing no less than six times, most excitingly as a solo rapper on “Take It Back,” but also in some of his various other incarnations (as Quasimoto, a producer, and Young Jazz Rebels, who seem to be the percussive cousins of Yesterdays New Quintet), including as a part of Madvillain, who contribute a fantastic new song, “Monkey Suite,” which has a tight yet spacy beat and some great lines from “DOOM all capitals, no trick spelling.” Lib’s brother, Oh No, shows up on “Oh Zone,” which pays tribute to his musical family and influences, and Percee P, the underappreciated MC who’s set to release his solo debut with Stones Throw, delivers fantastic, quick rhymes on “Raw Heat.” But besides the hip-hop, which is excellent, and showcases the best of each artist, Chrome Children also has examples of the label’s interest in other music. The lounge-funk of Gary Wilson emerges in “Dream(s)” (which had actually already been released on 2003′s Forgotten Lovers, but not yet on Stones Throw), Georgia Anne Muldrow does her experimental soul wanderings on “Simply a Joy,” Dudley Perkins adds his great, raspy Armageddon vocals over a Ray Charles-esque synth vamp on “Wassup World,” and Ohio’s Pure Essence’s “Third Rock,” taken from the Soul Cal imprint, is nothing but smooth, warm funk. Stones Throw has always claimed to be leading the way in innovative hip-hop, and Chrome Children proves that they’re definitely telling the truth. Here’s to ten more years. [The DVD included with the album contains interviews with both Madlib and Peanut Butter Wolf, as well as the [adult swim]-sponsored Stones Throw concert at the SXSW festival.] – Marisa Brown

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