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Doin' Damage

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (23 ratings)
Doin' Damage album cover
01
You'll Like It Too
2:59 $0.99
02
Stylin' Lyrics
5:17 $0.99
03
Puppy Love
4:14 $0.99
04
The Force Is Buggin
5:49 $0.99
05
The Move
6:08 $0.99
06
Strong Island
6:10 $0.99
07
Doin' Damage
3:36 $0.99
08
Take It Away
5:05 $0.99
09
The Force Is The Boss
4:54 $0.99
10
Nu Skool
3:52 $0.99
11
We Got Out Own Thing
4:09 $0.99
12
Force Field
4:50 $0.99
13
Tear The Show
3:46 $0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 60:49

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eMusic Review 0

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Hua Hsu

eMusic Contributor

Hua Hsu edits the hip-hop section of URB Magazine and writes about music, culture and politics for Slate, the Village Voice, The Wire and various other magazine...more »

04.22.11
JVC Force, Doin’ Damage
2002 | Label: Landspeed / Entertainment One Distribution

To those who glamorize the grimier streets of New York City, the outer territories of Long Island represent little more than an opportunity for ridicule. But the cushy suburban isle has played a significant hand in the history of hip-hop, and I'm not just talking about Amityville's finest, De la Soul. The J.V.C. Force trio of DJ Curt Cazal and rappers AJ Rok and B-Luv cut one of the finer albums of hip-hop's finest year — 1988. (Though their name sounded like it was nicked from an overzealous electronics store, it was actually an acronym for "Justified by Virtue of Creativity for All Reasons Concerning Entertainment." Whatever.) JVC are best known for "Strong Island," a blaring hometown anthem that borrowed a hypnotic guitar and raucous drums from Freda Payne, but their album has plenty of other should-be classics. Cazal cuts up an Isaac Hayes sample for the great "Stylin 'Lyrics," while the cheeky "Force Field" (a CD-only bonus cut) finds the trio "tasty like a pastry fresh out the bakery." When B-Luv proudly brags, "I'm a rappin 'star," over his partner's patchwork funk, you get the feeling they had no idea how big hip-hop would one day become — this… read more »

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underrated

doreens_music

i wouldn't say they are EPMD clones because EPMD have a low key sort of vocal style....however, it does sound like BDP/KRS-1 has some influence here. However, it's all good to me. really good.

user avatar

Average suburb rap

stglaw

I liked this album, but there is no way this even comes close to the better stuff that came out in '88 or '89. These guys are EPMD clones - most of the songs sound like they came right off of EPMD's "Strictly Business" disc. Considering they're from LI, it's not surprising. The best thing about this album are the DJ's mixes, which are pretty interesting ("Strong Island" is especially cool, with a cheesy early 70's sounding guitar and horns), but the lyrics are pretty weak, and very tame (almost bubblegum tame). After listening to BDP, Big Daddy Kane, EPMD and Public Enemy, JVC Force sounds pretty mediocre. Not a bad album, but nothing to write home about either.

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Before they were legends, they were just two dejected young men trying to get back to the Bronx. In 1986, nobody was checking for Boogie Down Productions, another of the seemingly endless queue of aspiring would-be rappers and party-animators who blanketed New York City. KRS-One and DJ Scott La Rock - names that would become part of hip-hop history by year's end - were just two guys named Kris Parker and Scott Sterling. Kris was the… more »