Mantronix: The Album

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Mantronix: The Album album cover
Album Information
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Total Tracks: 7   Total Length: 37:18

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Dubnation

Excellent album from start to end. I have to disagree with the thought that Fresh Is the Word is cheesy. That song put Mantronix on the map. Although the lyrics on most songs are a strain to follow, they match the beats laid down by Mantronik resulting in a classic combination.

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check out Music Madness

cjaxx

NOT Mantronix's most essential album as most critics will tell you. That distinction goes to the classic Music Madness. This release had a few great tracks (the first two) and the blueprint's definitely there, but this album is stretched thin and a lot of it is cheesy (Fresh is the Word? please.) and weak. Don't bother with Get Stupid Fresh until they get it right on the second album. Rawness and simplicity is usually a winner in my books, but The Album doesn't cut it. It's with Music Madness that they really accomplished greatness and nailed it.

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They Say All Music Guide

Curtis “Mantronik” Khaleel was often quoted as saying that his mission was to “take rap a step beyond the streets,” and the innovative producer/mixmaster accomplished that goal on Mantronix’s debut album, Mantronix: The Album. This excellent 1985 LP was way ahead of its time; while the rapping of Mantronix’s partner MC Tee is pure mid-’80s New York hip-hop, the production is anything but conventional. On gems like “Needle to the Groove,” “Bassline,” and the hit “Fresh Is the Word,” you can hear the parallels between Tee’s rhyming and the East Coast b-boy rhymes that Run-D.M.C., LL Cool J, and the Fat Boys were providing in 1985. But the album’s high-tech, futuristic production sets it apart from other New York hip-hop of the mid-’80s, and even though one of the LP’s tracks is titled “Hardcore Hip-Hop,” Mantronix had a hard time appealing to hip-hop’s hardcore. Mantronix: The Album actually fared better in dance music, electro-funk, and club circles than it did among hardcore b-boys. But this is definitely a hip-hop record, and it is also Mantronix’s most essential release. – Alex Henderson

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