A Future Without a Past...

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AMG AllMusic Guide: Pop Albums:

A Future Without a Past...

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Review

Even in the vibrant early-'90s hip-hop scene, A Future Without a Past... emerged as a breath of fresh air, simultaneously presenting a throwback to the old-school rhyme tradeoffs and call-and-response rapping styles of crews like the Furious Five and the Funky Four + One, and vaulting rap headlong into its future. Brash and full of youthful energy and exuberance, Leaders of the New School was the perfect meshing of three distinctly different but entirely complementary personalities whose flows flew in the face of conventional MC etiquette, from Dinco D.'s straightforward, intellectual tongue-twisting to Charlie Brown's zany shrieks to Busta Rhymes' viscous, reggae-inspired toasting -- skirting the line between seriousness and humor -- which, only a few years later, would help him to hit commercial pay dirt as a solo artist. That's not even to mention the DJ and sometime reggae-tinged emcee, DJ Cut Monitor Milo. The result is one of the most infectious rap albums ever created. The songs are, first and foremost, meant to be fun and humorous, and they are certainly that, particularly on Charlie Brown's nonsensical "What's the Pinocchio's Theory," the insistent "Trains, Planes and Automobiles" and "My Ding-A-Ling," and Busta Rhymes' jovial ode to full-figured women, "Feminine Fatt." The cut-and-paste production is expert throughout, packed with fresh samples, thanks to Bomb Squad member Eric "Vietnam" Sadler, the Stimulated Dummies crew, and the Vibe Chemist Backspin, and the group also show themselves to be quite capable with a sampler, particularly Milo's incredible work on "Case of the P.T.A." and "My Ding-A-Ling." But it would be wrong to simply peg this album as a foray into kinder, gentler, more lighthearted and innocent hip-hop. Firstly, the album has the feel and scope of a loose concept album and is separated into three sections, the first two set in school, the final one following the members after school lets out, and that alone points to a group of young men -- mostly still teenagers -- trying to move rap into new dimensions. Secondly, the ambience of New York permeates A Future Without a Past, but it is simply presented from a younger and far less jaded perspective. Songs such as "Just When You Thought It Was Safe" and "Sound of the Zeekers @#^**?!," if not exactly hard-edged and political, offer far more than throwaway sentiment, and lyrically L.O.N.S. never descend into naiveté. The album portrays a group of young men who are fully emerged in the sometimes less-than-innocent urban life that characterizes hip-hop culture, but are also able to transcend the inherent limits and pitfalls to which that life can lead. In that sense, it is a celebration of all the best aspects of hip-hop culture and youth. ~ Stanton Swihart, Rovi

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Wikipedia on Answers.com:

A Future Without a Past...

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A Future Without a Past...
Studio album by Leaders of the New School
Released July 2, 1991
Recorded September 1990-May 1991
Genre Hip hop, East Coast hip hop, Alternative hip hop
Length 66:06
Label Elektra
60976
Producer Busta Rhymes, Charlie Brown, Cut Monitor Milo, Geeby Dajani, Dinco D, John Gamble, Leaders of the New School, Dante Ross, Eric "Vietnam" Sadler
Leaders of the New School chronology
A Future Without a Past...
(1991)
T.I.M.E.
(1993)
Singles from A Future Without a Past...
  1. "Case of the P.T.A."
    Released: February 13, 1991
  2. "Sobb Story"
    Released: June 19, 1991
  3. "The International Zone Coaster"
    Released: October 24, 1991

A Future Without a Past... is the debut studio album from American hip hop group Leaders of the New School, released in 1991 on Elektra Records.

The album peaked at 128 on the Billboard 200 chart.

Contents

Release and reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 5/5 stars[1]
Oh Word favorable[2]

The album peaked at 128 on the U.S. Billboard 200 and fifty-three on the R&B Albums chart.[3]

Stanton Swihart of Allmusic praised the work, calling the group's debut "one of the most infectious rap albums ever created."[1] Nikhil P. Yerawadekar at Oh, Word, while noting that at times the insular focus of the album "make(s) the album as a whole feel... meandering," still commented that the group "bring(s) great production... new flows, and captivating personalities to the listener's attention in a most entertaining manner."[2]

Track listing

No. Title Music Sample(s)[4] Length
1. "Homeroom"     2:25
2. "Case of the P.T.A."   Cut Monitor Milo 3:42
3. "Too Much on My Mind"   The Vibe Chemist Backspin 4:27
4. "What's the Pinocchio's Theory?"   The Vibe Chemist Backspin 3:43
5. "Just When You Thought It Was Safe..."   Eric "Vietnam" Sadler   2:30
6. "Lunchroom"       2:10
7. "Sound of the Zeekers @#^**?!" (feat. Cracker Jacks, Kollie Weed, and Rumpletilskinz) Busta Rhymes 5:16
8. "Sobb Story"   Eric "Vietnam" Sadler 4:51
9. "Feminine Fatt"   The Vibe Chemist Backspin   3:08
10. "Transformers"   Geeby Dajani, John Gamble, Dante Ross 4:00
11. "Afterschool"     1:24
12. "Show Me a Hero"   The Vibe Chemist Backspin 4:35
13. "Trains, Planes and Automobiles"   Eric "Vietnam" Sadler   4:04
14. "The International Zone Coaster"   Geeby Dajani, John Gamble, Dante Ross 5:05
15. "Teachers, Don't Teach Us Nonsense!!"   Leaders of the New School
  • "Funky Drummer" by James Brown
  • "The Thing to Do" by Blue Mitchell
4:06
16. "My Ding-a-Ling"   Cut Monitor Milo, Dinco D 3:41
17. "Where Do We Go From Here?"   Charlie Brown 6:51

Chart history

Album

Chart (1991)[3] Peak
position
U.S. Billboard 200 128
U.S. Heatseekers 1
U.S. R&B Albums 53

Singles

Year Single Peak chart positions[5]
U.S. Hot Rap Singles
1991 "Case of the P.T.A." 4
"Sobb Story" 8
1992 "The International Zone Coaster" 1

Personnel

Information taken from Allmusic.[6]

  • assistant engineering – John Gamble
  • engineering – Dr. Shane Faber, Mike Mangini, Christopher Shaw
  • mixing – Busta Rhymes, Charlie Brown, Geeby Dajani, John Gamble, Dante Ross, Eric "Vietnam" Sadler
  • production – Busta Rhymes, Charlie Brown, Cut Monitor Milo, Geeby Dajani, Dinco D, John Gamble, Leaders of the New School, Dante Ross, Eric "Vietnam" Sadler

Notes

External links


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Copyrights:

Mentioned in

Leaders of the New School (Rap Band, '90s)
A Future Without a Past... (1991 Album by Leaders of the New School)
Busta Rhymes (Rap Artist, '90s, 2000s)
What Is a Rumpletilskin? (1993 Album by Rumpletilskinz)
Total Devastation: The Best of Busta Rhymes (2001 Album by Busta Rhymes)