Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Here Comes the Fuzz

Did you mean: Here Comes the Fuzz (2003 Album by Mark Ronson), Here Comes the Fuzz [Clean] (2003 Album by Mark Ronson)

 
Album Review: Here Comes the Fuzz
 

  • Artist: Mark Ronson
  • Rating: StarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: August 26, 2003
  • Type: Contains explicit content, Enhanced CD-ROM
  • Genre: Rap

Review

Loaded with guest artists and packed with danceable beats, DJ Mark Ronson's first record, Here Comes the Fuzz, is less a showcase for the New York-based artist's turntable skills and more of a radio-friendly pop-rap party album. A rising star on the NYC club scene since the late '90s, the occasional Tommy Hilfiger model and son of glam rock icon guitarist Mick Ronson previously produced tracks for other hip downtown scenesters, including Saturday Night Live regular Jimmy Fallon as well as singer Nikka Costa and rapper Sean Paul -- both of whom return the favor here. Much in the same way as DJ Shadow's Endtroducing... or the Avalanches' Since I Left You used the Beastie Boys' Paul's Boutique as their template to display an eclectic and voracious record-collecting habit, Ronson's Here Comes the Fuzz mixes funk, hip-hop, soul, and rock into an "everything goes when you're having fun" cocktail. While never displaying the innovative vision or giddy melody-mixing heights of either of those albums, Here Comes the Fuzz does still resonate with the pulse of youthful ego driven by libido and hot wax. To these ends, rappers Ghostface Killah and Nate Dogg take the mic over a funky cowbell and the string section of Dennis Coffey's "Scorpio" on "Ooh Wee." Similarly, Mos Def and M.O.P. add Brooklyn street cred to Ronson's catchy if a bit obvious co-opting of Lenny Kravitz's hit "On the Run." Perhaps most interesting though, are Ronson's attempts at actual songwriting such as on the cosmopolitan disco plea "High," featuring vocalist Aya, and the punk à gogo of "I Suck" with Rivers Cuomo, which finds the Weezer frontman doing his best "Let's Go to Bed"-era Robert Smith warble against a sample from Labi Siffre's "Too Late." ~ Matt Collar, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Intro Mark Ronson Mark Ronson (1:26)
Bluegrass Stain'd B.J. Scott, Anthony Hamilton, R.N. Hughes, Mark Ronson, Guyora Kats Anthony Hamilton, Nappy Roots, Mark Ronson (4:12)
Ooh Wee N. Hale, Mark Ronson Ghostface Killah, Nate Dogg, Trife & Larceny Of The Snakes, Mark Ronson (3:30)
High Mark Ronson, Bill Chang Mark Ronson (4:06)
I Suck Rivers Cuomo, Mark Ronson Rivers Cuomo, Mark Ronson (2:55)
International Affair Mark Ronson, Debi Nova Tweet, Sean Paul, Mark Ronson (3:25)
Diduntdidunt Mark Ronson Mark Ronson (3:59)
On the Run Mark Ronson, Dante Smith M.O.P., Mos Def, Mark Ronson (2:37)
Here Comes the Fuzz Nikka Costa, Mark Ronson Mark Ronson (3:10)
Bout to Get Ugly Anthony Hamilton, Mark Ronson, Clifford Smith Anthony Hamilton, Mark Ronson (3:33)
She's Got Me Mark Ronson, Daniel Merriweather Mark Ronson, Daniel Merriweather (3:49)
Tomorrow Mark Ronson, Debi Nova Q-Tip, Mark Ronson, Debi Nova (3:56)
Rashi (Outro) Mark Ronson Mark Ronson (2:03)

Credits

Aya (Vocals), Howard Benson (Vocal Producer), Larry Gold (Conductor), Larry Gold (Horn Arrangements), Larry Gold (String Arrangements), Sylvia Rhone (A&R), Tim Roberts (Assistant), Justin Stanley (Producer), Serban Ghenea (Mixing), Josh Deutsch (A&R), Rivers Cuomo (Vocals), Dave Scott (Design), Ghostface Killah (Vocals), Nate Dogg (Vocals), Anthony Hamilton (Vocals), Saigon (Vocals), Dominique Trenier (Executive Producer), ?uestlove (Percussion), ?uestlove (Drums), Printz Board (Trumpet), Printz Board (Horn Arrangements), Vaughan Merrick (Engineer), Nappy Roots (Vocals), Trife (Vocals), Nikka Costa (Vocals), John Hanes (Digital Editing), Freeway (Vocals), Mark Ronson (Bass), Mark Ronson (Guitar), Mark Ronson (Percussion), Mark Ronson (Scratching), Mark Ronson (Keyboards), Mark Ronson (Vocals), Mark Ronson (Producer), Mark Ronson (Executive Producer), Mark Ronson (Fender Rhodes), Mark Ronson (Horn Arrangements), Mark Ronson (Wurlitzer), Mark Ronson (Beats), Mark Ronson (Distortion), Debbie Nova (Keyboards), Debbie Nova (Vocals), Debbie Nova (Vocal Arrangement), Gregory Gigendad Burke (Art Direction), Gregory Gigendad Burke (Design), Bill Chang (Bass), Bill Chang (Guitar), Roxanne Lowitt (Photography), Daniel Merriweather (Guitar), Daniel Merriweather (Vocals), Tim Izzo (Saxophone), Guyora Kats (Fender Rhodes), Guyora Kats (Wurlitzer), Guyora Kats (Juno)
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a word or phrase...
All Community Q&A Reference topics
 
Wikipedia: Here Comes the Fuzz
Top
Here Comes the Fuzz
Here Comes the Fuzz cover
Studio album by Mark Ronson
Released 8 September 2003
Genre alternative hip hop
Label Elektra
Professional reviews
Mark Ronson chronology
Here Comes the Fuzz
(2003)
Version
(2007)

Here Comes the Fuzz is the debut album by English DJ Mark Ronson.

Contents

Track listing

  1. "This DJ"
  2. "Bluegrass Stain'd" (featuring Nappy Roots & Anthony Hamilton)
  3. "Ooh Wee" (featuring Ghostface Killah, Nate Dogg, Trife & Saigon)
  4. "High" (featuring Aya)
  5. "I Suck" (featuring Rivers Cuomo)
  6. "International Affair" (featuring Sean Paul & Tweet)
  7. "Diduntdidunt" (featuring Saigon)
  8. "On The Run" (featuring Mos Def & M.O.P.)
  9. "Here Comes The Fuzz" (featuring Freeway, Nikka Costa & Jack White)
  10. "'Bout To Get Ugly" (featuring Rhymefest & Anthony Hamilton)
  11. "She's Got Me" (featuring Daniel Merriweather)
  12. "Tomorrow" (featuring Debi Nova & Q-Tip)
  13. "Rashi" (Outro)


The Japanese version of the album contains a fourteenth track; "NYC Rules" (AKA "City Rules") a solo track performed by Daniel Merriweather (featuring Saigon) produced by Mark Ronson.

Notes

"International Affair" was originally released on Sean Paul's Dutty Rock album and featured Debi Nova instead of Tweet.

Singles

"Ooh Wee" was the only official single release from the album, but "International Affair" also made an impact on US Rhythmic radio, charting from airplay as an album cut. "She's Got Me" was also later released as a single in Australia; but was released by Daniel Merriweather's record label and credited to him only.

Critical response

Rolling Stone predicted the album would stop the critical ill-will towards Ronson, saying Ronson "serves up a grab bag of pumping beats."[1] Less enthusiastically, Entertainment Weekly gave the album a C, saying "the collection's overall disco-licious come-together vibe is cloying and insubstantial."[2]


Footnotes

  1. ^ Diehl, Matt (2003-09-04), "Mark Ronson: Here Comes the Fuzz". Rolling Stone. (930):142
  2. ^ Drumming, Neil (2003-09-12), "MARK RONSON". Entertainment Weekly. (727/728):152



 
 

Did you mean: Here Comes the Fuzz (2003 Album by Mark Ronson), Here Comes the Fuzz [Clean] (2003 Album by Mark Ronson)

Learn More
Here Comes the Fuzz [Japan Bonus Track] (2005 Album by Mark Ronson)
Teresa's Son (1970 Album by Jimmy Sabater)
Daniel Merriweather (Rhythm & Blues Artist, 2000s)

Is fuzz fuzzy? Read answer...
Do all peaches have fuzz on them? Read answer...
What is Fuzz Academy? Read answer...

Help us answer these
What did fuzz do before disturberd?
What causes the fuzz between stations on a TV?
Where did the word fuzz come from?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

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 GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Here Comes the Fuzz" Read more

 

Mentioned in