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Death Certificate

 
Album Review: Death Certificate

  • Artist: Ice Cube
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: October 31, 1991
  • Total Time: 61:08
  • Type: Contains explicit content
  • Genre: Rap

Review

If Ice Cube's debut was a shocking attack that proved the N.W.A legacy would be stronger divided, his sophomore effort was a new kind of superstar pulling off the miraculous, a follow-up that equals its classic predecessor and tops it in some people's books. With a million copies of Death Certificate preordered, Cube was no longer the rock critics' darling. A million people listening was dangerous, especially since he was now slithering his influence into the suburbs. If the black rage didn't get you, the misogyny of "I'm gonna do my thing, with your daughter" probably would. Here, one of rap's greatest storytellers is able to draw hatred in under a minute with the short and direct "Black Korea," an angry protest song concerning Korean grocers that got him dubbed "racist" and "Ice KKKube" by some. The track is an extreme representation of how a much sharper and cutting this album is when compared with his debut, and even though the intro announces the full-length is divided into a "Death Side" and "Life Side," both are equally bleak. With the CD format, the two sides are indistinguishable and run over the listener with fast tales of drug dealing, drive-by shootings, and women who go from "Ms. Thing to Ms. Gonorrhea." This would be numbing if it weren't for the rapper's amazing lyrics, ground-shaking delivery, and insight like when "A Bird in the Hand" deals with the irony of selling crap to buy diapers ("Gotta serve you food that might give you cancer/Cuz my son doesn't take no for answer"). A bit of sweet relief comes with the brightness of the great single "Steady Mobbin'" and with the nostalgia and slow tempo of "Doing Dumb Shit." "True to the Game" ("Ain't that a bitch/They hate to see a young nigga rich") is arguably the quintessential Cube track and if all this weren't enough already, the N.W.A diss "No Vaseline" hangs off the album like a crowd-pleasing, Brick-sampling encore. Although next year's Predator would be a bigger hit, Death Certificate brings to a close the man's trilogy of perfect albums that began with N.W.A's Compton and explodes into a supernova right here. ~ David Jeffries, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
The Funeral Sir Jinx Ice Cube (1:37)
The Wrong Nigga to Fuck Wit (Lyrics) Ice Cube Ice Cube (2:48)
My Summer Vacation (Lyrics) Ice Cube Ice Cube (3:56)
Steady Mobbin' (Lyrics) Ice Cube Ice Cube (4:09)
Robin Lench Boogie Men, Sir Jinx Ice Cube (1:13)
Givin' Up the Nappy Dug Out (Lyrics) Ice Cube Ice Cube (4:14)
Look Who's Burnin' (Lyrics) Ice Cube Ice Cube (3:53)
A Bird in the Hand Ice Cube Ice Cube (2:17)
Man's Best Friend (Lyrics) Ice Cube Ice Cube (2:06)
Alive on Arrival (Lyrics) Ice Cube Ice Cube (3:11)
Death Dr. Khallid Abdul Muhammad Ice Cube (1:03)
The Birth Dr. Khallid Abdul Muhammad Ice Cube (1:21)
I Wanna Kill Sam (Lyrics) Ice Cube Ice Cube (3:22)
Horny Lil' Devil (Lyrics) Ice Cube Ice Cube (3:42)
Black Korea (Lyrics) Ice Cube Ice Cube (:46)
True to the Game (Lyrics) Ice Cube Ice Cube (4:10)
Color Blind (Lyrics) King Tee, Ice Cube, J. Dee, Kam Ice Cube (4:29)
Doing Dumb Shit (Lyrics) Ice Cube Ice Cube (3:45)
Us (Lyrics) Ice Cube Ice Cube (3:43)
No Vaseline (Lyrics) Ice Cube Ice Cube (5:13)

Credits

Frank Macek (Mixing Engineer), Mr. Stoker (Engineer), Ice Cube (Liner Notes), Sir Jinx (Producer), Ice Cube (Producer), Bob Morse (Engineer), DJ Pooh (Mixing), Boogie Men (Producer), Bob Morse (Mixing Engineer), Mario Castellanos (Photography), Frank Macek (Engineer), Bernie Grundman (Mastering), Daryll Dobson (Mixing), Sir Jinx (Mixing), Ice Cube (Executive Producer), Ice Cube (Mixing), Kevin Hosmann (Art Direction)
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Wikipedia: Death Certificate (album)
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This is the article about Ice Cube's album. For the document concerning a person's death, see Death certificate.
Death Certificate
Studio album by Ice Cube
Released October 31, 1991
Recorded 1990-1991
Genre Gangsta rap
West Coast hip hop
Golden age hip hop
Political hip hop
Length 61:08
Label Priority
CDL-57155
Producer Sir Jinx
Ice Cube
Boogiemen
Professional reviews
Ice Cube chronology
Kill at Will
(1990)
Death Certificate
(1991)
The Predator
(1992)
Singles from Death Certificate
  1. "Steady Mobbin'"
    Released: December 1991
  2. "True to the Game"
    Released: September, 1992

Death Certificate is the second studio album by rapper Ice Cube, released October 31, 1991 on Priority Records. Highly anticipated with over a million advance orders[1], the album was certified platinum in sales on December 20, 1991.[2] The album debuted on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart at #1 and on the Billboard 200 chart at #2, while it went on to sell over two million copies to date.[3] It is considered one of the greatest hip hop albums of all time.[4] It was also the source of much controversy due to some of its racially charged content, and Ice Cube's acerbic statements on drug dealing, racial profiling, and the right to keep and bear arms.

In 1992, as a result of the album's controversy, the state of Oregon declared any display of Ice Cube's image in retail stores throughout the state illegal. This ban also included advertisements for St. Ides Malt Liquor, which Ice Cube endorsed at the time.[5] In 2003, Priority Records re-released Death Certificate, which included a bonus track, "How to Survive in South Central", that originally appeared on the Boyz N the Hood soundtrack.

Contents

Songs and music

Ice Cube began work on Death Certificate a few months after his last release, the Kill At Will EP. However, unlike his debut album, which featured booming beats by the The Bomb Squad, the majority of tracks on Death Certificate were produced by Sir Jinx, Boogiemen, and Cube himself. This gave the album a slightly more West Coast-oriented sound in comparison to his debut. A number of the tracks also use samples taken from California-based acts such as Zapp, and Fishbone.

Content

The album was roughly organized as two thematic elements of a larger whole, and opens with Cube's explanation: "The Death Side: a mirror image of where we are today; The Life Side: a vision of where we need to go." The first half, therefore, is replete with the tales of drug dealing, whore-mongering and violence expected of a gangsta rap album in 1991. The second half provided something of a synthesis between that genre and the type of prescriptive messages more often found from artists wholly divorced from the gangsta image.

Both sides, however, provide a more introspective and encouraging outlook than fits with the common conception of gangsta rap. The Death Side's "A Bird in the Hand" laments a young man's slide into a life of drug-dealing after finding that the best jobs available to him with little education and a jail record simply won't pay the bills.

Do I have to sell me a whole lot of crack
For decent shelter and clothes on my back?
Or should I just wait for help from Bush?
Or Jesse Jackson and Operation PUSH?

There is no shortage of nihilistic or, at least, criminal posturing either, with the Life Side's "Black Korea" threatening rioting and arson alongside Black entrepreneurship as a response to the preponderance of Korean grocery stores in ghettos across the United States. The track was seen as a response to the death of Latasha Harlins, a 15-year-old African American girl who had been shot by a Korean store owner on March 16, 1991 because the owner thought Harlins was trying to steal a bottle of orange juice. Considering that the release of the track preceded the Los Angeles Riots, in which many of the people targeted were of Korean descent, Ice Cube was accused of inciting racism by some groups.

The track "Look Who's Burnin'" tells of the dangers of sexually transmitted diseases in low income neighborhoods, while "Alive on Arrival" tells the story of a young man caught in the crossfire of a gang shootout who slowly bleeds to death while in a hospital waiting room. "Color Blind" preaches neutrality and brotherhood between gangs, such as the Bloods and Crips. The album is also famous for the bonus track "No Vaseline," a vicious "diss track" aimed at Ice Cube's former N.W.A band mates.

Reception

Death Certificate received a "meager" $18,000 promotion budget, and neither of its singles received much airplay, although the album's two singles, "Steady Mobbin'" and "True to the Game," received music video treatment.[6]

Acclaim

Allmusic calls Death Certificate "even harder and angrier than AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted... It continues the sharp insights and unflinching looks at contemporary urban lifestyles that his solo debut only hinted at; in short, it's hardcore without any gangsta posturing." They also call it "funkier, noisier, and more musically effective (than AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted)."

  • Rating: A- "...20 tracks of the most visceral music ever allowed in public..." - Entertainment Weekly [7](11/15/91)[7]
  • Rating: Recommended "...adrenalin-drenched funk...integrates vitriolic politics with raw street knowledge...achieves an almost George Clinton-esque sense of celebratory freakiness..." - Spin (1/92, p. 72)[7]

Accolades

  • Ranked #13 in About.com's 100 Greatest Hip-Hip Albums list in 2008[8]
  • Ranked #5 in Ego Trip's Hip Hop's 25 Greatest Albums by Year 1980-98 list in 1999[9]
  • Ranked #17 in The Sources's The Critic's Top 100 Black Music Album's of All Time list in 2006[10]
  • Ranked #20 in Dance De Lux's 25 Best Hip-Hop Records list in 2001[11]
  • Ranked #16 in the Village Voice's Best Albums of the Year list in in 1991[12]
  • Ranked #37 in the New Musical Express's Best Albums of the Year list in 1991[13]
  • Ranked #8 in MTV's Greatest Hip-Hop Albums of All Time list in 2005[14]
  • Included in Vibe's 100 Essential Albums of the 20th Century in 1999[15]
  • Included in The Sources's 100 Best Rap Albums list in 1998[16]

Controversy

In the September 2006 issue of FHM, Ice Cube stated in an interview that he did not regret the controversial statements made on the album. Regarding the offense caused to Koreans, he said, "If there's still a problem, it's their problem."[citation needed] Due to fear that laws against racial incitement in the United Kingdom could see the album banned, the United Kingdom release removed the tracks "Black Korea" and "No Vaseline." Island Records, the distributor of this version of the album, deleted these tracks with the consent of Priority Records, but not Ice Cube himself.[6] However, these tracks do feature on this album in the present day.

Track listing

  • In the album's liner notes, tracks 1-11 are credited as "The Death Side" and tracks 12-20 are credited as "The Life Side."
  • The Track "How to Survive in South Central" from the motion picture Boyz N the Hood appears as a bonus track on later remastered pressings.
# Title Performer(s) Producer(s) Samples Time
1 "The Funeral" *Intro* Sir Jinx 1:37
2 "The Wrong Nigga to Fuck Wit" Ice Cube Ice Cube,
Sir Jinx
2:48
3 "My Summer Vacation" Ice Cube Boogiemen,
Ice Cube
3:56
4 "Steady Mobbin'" Ice Cube Boogiemen,
Ice Cube
4:10
5 "Robin Lench" *interlude* Boogiemen,
Sir Jinx
1:13
6 "Givin' Up the Nappy Dug Out" Ice Cube Boogiemen,
Ice Cube
4:15
7 "Look Who's Burnin'" Ice Cube Ice Cube,
Sir Jinx
3:53
8 "A Bird in the Hand" Ice Cube Boogiemen,
Ice Cube
2:17
9 "Man's Best Friend" Ice Cube Boogiemen,
Ice Cube
2:06
10 "Alive on Arrival" Ice Cube Boogiemen,
Ice Cube
3:11
11 "Death" Khalid Muhammad Ice Cube
  • "A Funky Song" by Ripple
1:03
12 "The Birth" Khalid Muhammad Ice Cube,
Sir Jinx
1:21
13 "I Wanna Kill Sam" Ice Cube Ice Cube,
Sir Jinx
3:22
14 "Horny Lil' Devil" Ice Cube Boogiemen,
Ice Cube
3:42
15 "Black Korea" Ice Cube Ice Cube,
Sir Jinx
  • Excerpt from the film Do The Right Thing
0:46
16 "True To The Game" Ice Cube Ice Cube,
Sir Jinx
4:10
17 "Color Blind" Ice Cube,
Deadly Threat,
Kam,
The Madd Circle,
King Tee,
J-Dee
Boogiemen,
Ice Cube
4:29
18 "Doing Dumb Shit" Ice Cube Boogiemen,
Ice Cube
3:45
19 "Us" Ice Cube Ice Cube,
Sir Jinx
  • "Gamin' on Ya!" by Parliament
  • "Synthetic Substitution" by Melvin Bliss
3:43
20 "No Vaseline" Ice Cube Ice Cube,
Sir Jinx
5:15

Album singles

"Steady Mobbin'"

"True to the Game"

  • Released: September 14, 1992
  • B-side: "Givin' Up The Nappy Dug Out"

Chart positions

Album

Year Album Chart positions
Billboard 200 Top R&B/Hip Hop Albums
1991 Death Certificate #2 #1

Singles

Year Song Chart positions
Billboard Hot 100 Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks Hot Rap Singles
1991 "Steady Mobbin'" - #30 #3

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Death Certificate (album)" Read more