Straight Outta Compton (2002 Digital Remaster) (Explicit)

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Straight Outta Compton (2002 Digital Remaster) (Explicit) album cover
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EXPLICIT // EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 17   Total Length: 71:56

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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 »

05.18.11
Still epitomizing hip-hop at its most dangerous, even if we now know better
2002 | Label: PRIORITY RECORDS

If you go back and watch the video for N.W.A.'s "Straight Outta Compton," you will notice that not one of member of the group is carrying a weapon. It is the cops who wield the clubs and firearms. The Compton quintet, who don't appear to be guilty of anything other than possessing attitude, spend most of the video on the run. This may run against the grain of memory, which preserves N.W.A. as violent scourges to the genteel America of 1988. But for all their menacing glares and outlaw tales ("Gangsta Gangsta," "Dopeman"), threats to the police ("Fuck the Police") and neglect of social mores, they were merely playing a part — this was a revenge fantasy, posture as dignity, attitude as self-defense. Their 1988 debut is still bracing, thanks largely to the abrasive, raw funk of Dr. Dre's beats and the uniqueness of their personas. There is an unhinged glee to Eazy-E's barely-kempt boasts and Ren's cruel, heartless, intricate verses, while few rappers have cast as foreboding an air as Cube in his prime. It's a testament to the strength of their performance and the enduring power of their iconography that N.W.A. still epitomizes hip-hop at its most dangerous,… read more »

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Straight Outta Compton wasn’t quite the first gangsta rap album, but it was the first one to find a popular audience, and its sensibility virtually defined the genre from its 1988 release on. It established gangsta rap — and, moreover, West Coast rap in general — as a commercial force, going platinum with no airplay and crossing over with shock-hungry white teenagers. Unlike Ice-T, there’s little social criticism or reflection on the gangsta lifestyle; most of the record is about raising hell — harassing women, driving drunk, shooting it out with cops and partygoers. All of that directionless rebellion and rage produces some of the most frightening, visceral moments in all of rap, especially the amazing opening trio of songs, which threaten to dwarf everything that follows. Given the album’s sheer force, the production is surprisingly spare, even a little low-budget — mostly DJ scratches and a drum machine, plus a few sampled horn blasts and bits of funk guitar. Although they were as much a reaction against pop-friendly rap, Straight Outta Compton’s insistent claims of reality ring a little hollow today, since it hardly ever depicts consequences. But despite all the romanticized invincibility, the force and detail of Ice Cube’s writing makes the exaggerations resonate. Although Cube wrote some of his bandmates’ raps, including nearly all of Eazy-E’s, each member has a distinct delivery and character, and the energy of their individual personalities puts their generic imitators to shame. But although Straight Outta Compton has its own share of posturing, it still sounds refreshingly uncalculated because of its irreverent, gonzo sense of humor, still unfortunately rare in hardcore rap. There are several undistinguished misfires during the second half, but they aren’t nearly enough to detract from the overall magnitude. It’s impossible to overstate the enduring impact of Straight Outta Compton; as polarizing as its outlook may be, it remains an essential landmark, one of hip-hop’s all-time greatest. [The 2002 reissue adds an extended version of both "Straight Outta Compton" and "Express Yourself," the B-side "Bonus Beats," and the legendary "A Bitch Iz a Bitch" single.] – Steve Huey

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