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Madvillainy 2: The Madlib Remix

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (124 ratings)

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Madvillainy 2: The Madlib Remix album cover
01
Pow! (Intro)
1:50
02
No Brain
2:08
03
Pearls
2:41
04
Light of the Past
2:09
05
Boulder Holder
2:22
06
Borrowed Time
3:00
07
Space Ho's Coast to Coast
3:40
08
Invazion (Interlude)
1:12
09
Drainos
3:26
10
Fire In The Hole
2:34
11
Heat Niner
1:38
12
Monkey Suit
2:18
13
Fluid (Instrumental)
1:20
14
Can't Reform Em
1:56
15
Redd Spot (Interlude)
0:44
16
Running Around with Another
2:49
17
Butter King Jewels
3:38
18
Sermon
2:32
19
Roller Coaster Riders (Instrumental)
1:32
20
3.214
2:03
21
Confucius Spot (Interlude)
0:20
22
Never Go Pop
1:55
23
Savage Beast (Instrumental)
1:21
24
Cold One
3:06
25
Cold One (Reprise)
0:45
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 25   Total Length: 52:59

Find a problem with a track? Let us know.

eMusic Review 0

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Ben Westhoff

eMusic Contributor

Ben Westhoff is a music scribe who has written for L.A. Weekly, Village Voice, Spin, XXL, Pitchfork, NPR and so, so many more. His book Dirty South: OutKast, Li...more »

09.29.08
A sublime piece of rap high art pushes even further into orbit on this tasty remix
2008 | Label: Stones Throw

Madvillainy was a landmark album, a consensus piece of rap high art. The 2004 work featured Dadaist emcee MF Doom at his creative peak: his parables about blunted weirdos and treacherous characters were punctuated with raunchy punchlines and left-field imagery, making for a kind of sublime surrealism that hasn't been equaled since. Combined with producer Madlib's chaotic, thickly textured beats, the album was almost impossibly fun — and an oddly cohesive gem.

So, why make Madvillainy 2: The Madlib Remix? Better question: why not? Doom is almost completely AWOL these days, heard from only when he's denying rumors that he's on his deathbed, or when he sends in impostors wearing his gladiator mask to play his shows. And so while Madlib may be more than ready to do a Madvillain follow-up album, Doom hasn't quite gotten his act together. In this light, the remix makes sense — if only to give fans something to chew on in Doom's absence.

Madvillainy 2 is certainly tasty — like the first disc, it's challenging but rewards repeated listens. The songs have been dramatically overhauled; some of the original tracks have been renamed but are otherwise similar ("Curls" is now "Pearls!"), some have… read more »

Write a Review 7 Member Reviews

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user avatar

Doesn't quite work

ibob

DOOM's lyrics (and the way he performs them) are so intricately well fitted to the beats on the original that this doesn't really work for me.

user avatar

Madvillainy 1.5

row1.info

A good album but not worthy of being labeled a sequel. It is new Madlib and but old DOOM.

user avatar

Not quite there...

iguessmusicisprettycool

Can't re-capture the magic of the original, but still pretty good. Definately get the first album and decide if you like it

user avatar

It's About Time!

Kneon

As a MF Doom fan i knew it was only a matter of time before another album debuted. Thank goodness! Madvillainy is still one of the "better days" release, but don't knock this one off, check it out for yourself!

user avatar

Pow...Out go the lights!

jimfear

Anyone who loves Madvillain should scoop this up. Good Stuff.

user avatar

different take on a true classic

monkeymaster

another gem from the super villains. it's strange lsitening to the familiar vocals with the different production at first but it all seems natural after a few listens. the production has madlib stamped all over it so if you dig madlib or doom then purchase this now. cant say it's not as good as the original as i need to listen to it more. it's a different take on a true classic and it works.

user avatar

Is it as good as Madvillainy?

Yancey

No, it's not. However, it is still very, very good, and comes highly recommended.

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