eMusic Review 0
As with many early 1990s hip-hop albums, Enta Da Stage is a lesson in resourcefulness. Its conceit is clear: calm, menacing Buckshot and sideman 5 Ft. Accelerator narrate a rough and ready skulk through the mean streets of Brooklyn, peddling some weed, harassing some brownstoners and getting in some dozen-deep dust-ups. But the overall sound of Enta remains unusual to this day. It sounds dark, murky and, above all, coherent.
Producers Evil Dee and Mr. Walt built Enta on hard drums and the once-reviled jazz-fusion of Grover Washington, Jr., Ronnie Laws, John Klemmer and Donald Byrd. You might find their raw materials for cheap at any used record shop, but you would struggle to figure out how Evil Dee and Walt — otherwise known as the Beatminerz — came up with "I Gotcha Opin," "Make Munne" or "Slave," dusty classics all. The triptych of cult hits — "How Many MCs…," "Buck 'Em Down" and "Who Got Da Props" — became a later generation's blueprint for classic New York hip-hop, and you can still hear traces of Buckshot's singsong raps along the radio dial. But Enta arrived a shade early to bask in New York's mid 1990s renaissance.… read more »