Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Internal Affairs

 
Album Review: Internal Affairs

  • Artist: Pharoahe Monch
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: October 19, 1999
  • Type: Contains explicit content
  • Genre: Rap

Review

After three cultishly revered albums with Organized Konfusion, underground legend Pharoahe Monch cut a solo deal with Rawkus and delivered his debut, Internal Affairs, in late 1999. Both Monch and Rawkus seemed to want to push their music farther above ground, and some longtime followers were shocked to hear a harder, angrier, more profane Monch, who seemed to be courting a more thugged-out audience. But it's a reinvention that doesn't compromise his high lyrical standards, making Internal Affairs a success on its own terms. Sounding like it was sampled from a monster-movie soundtrack, the club smash "Simon Says" sets the tone for the album; Monch delivers rapid-fire, intricately rhymed lines in between shouts of "get the f*ck up!" and "girls, rub on your titties!" It proved to be the most successful crossover bid of Monch's career, and much of the rest of Internal Affairs manages to straddle the underground/mainstream divide surprisingly well. Even when he's just giving shout-outs to Queens, or enlisting guests like Canibus and M.O.P. to help pummel a track into submission, Monch lives up to his reputation as one of hip-hop's most technically skilled MCs. Nowhere is this balancing act more evident than on "Rape," a rather disquieting extended metaphor for his mastery of hip-hop (other MCs just "ain't f*ckin' it right"). A more benign theme track is "Official," whose carefully constructed barrage of sports references demonstrates the cleverness that made Monch a cult legend. Not everything sits well together -- the sophomoric "The Ass" is an odd way to lead into the love song "The Light," the Organized Konfusion reunion "God Send," and the reflective "The Truth," which features guest appearances by Common and Talib Kweli. But in terms of bringing an underappreciated hip-hop great to a (somewhat) wider audience, Internal Affairs generally gets it right. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Intro (Lyrics) George Spivey Pharoahe Monch (3:03)
Behind Closed Doors (Lyrics) Pharoahe Monch (3:11)
Queens (Lyrics) Musze Pharoahe Monch (3:30)
Rape (Lyrics) Pharoahe Monch (2:34)
Simon Says (Lyrics) Pharoahe Monch (2:53)
Official (Lyrics) Pharoahe Monch (3:47)
Hell (Lyrics) G. Williams Canibus, Pharoahe Monch (3:09)
No Mercy (Lyrics) Pharoahe Monch (4:29)
Right Here (Lyrics) Pharoahe Monch (2:56)
The Next Shit Trevor Smith Busta Rhymes, Pharoahe Monch (3:20)
The Ass Pharoahe Monch, Apani B Fly Emcee (3:27)
The Light Pharoahe Monch (3:36)
God Send (Lyrics) Organized Konfusion, Pharoahe Monch (3:16)
The Truth Common, Talib Kweli, Pharoahe Monch (3:56)
Simon Says [Remix] Redman, Busta Rhymes, Method Man, Lady Luck, Shabaam Sahdeeq, Pharoahe Monch (6:15)

Credits

Method Man (Performer), Busta Rhymes (Performer), Talib Kweli (Performer), Shabaam Sahdeeq (Performer), Common (Performer), Diamond D (Producer), DJ Scratch (Producer), Troy Hightower (Mixing), Organized Konfusion (Performer), Lady Luck (Performer), Black Thought (Performer), DJ Scratch (Performer), The Alchemist (Producer), Lee Stone (Producer)
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Internal Affairs (album)
Top
Internal Affairs
Studio album by Pharoahe Monch
Released October 19, 1999
Recorded 1998 - 1999
Genre Hip hop
Label Rawkus/Priority/EMI Records
Producer DJ Scratch
Pharoahe Monch
Lee Stone
The Alchemist
Diamond D
Professional reviews
Pharoahe Monch chronology
Internal Affairs
(1999)
Desire
(2007)

Internal Affairs is the solo debut from former Organized Konfusion member Pharoahe Monch, released on Rawkus Records and Hollywood Records. Monch creates a harder sound than heard on the previous Organized Konfusion records. The album spawned the Hot 100 hit "Simon Says". Monch made his highest debut on the charts, just missing the Top 40 on the Billboard 200 album chart, going on to sell over 200,000 copies.[citation needed] However, because of the illegal use of music from the Godzilla (Main Theme) of Godzilla vs. Mothra as a sample in "Simon Says," the album was deleted.[citation needed] The album was well received by music critics and fans, receiving a near-perfect 4.5 mics rating from The Source. About.com ranked Internal Affairs #84 on their list of 100 best rap albums. [1]

Contents

Track listing

# Title Songwriters Producer(s) Performer (s) Samples
1 "Intro" T. Jamerson, G. Spivey DJ Scratch Pharoahe Monch
2 "Behind Closed Doors" T. Jamerson Pharoahe Monch Pharoahe Monch
3 "Queens" T. Jamerson, MUSZE, H. David Pharoahe Monch, Lee Stone Pharoahe Monch
  • "Til the Cops Come Knockin" by Maxwell
4 "Rape" T. Jamerson Pharoahe Monch Pharoahe Monch
  • "Candy Man" by Quincy Jones
5 "Simon Says" T. Jamerson Pharoahe Monch Pharoahe Monch
6 "Official" T. Jamerson, L. Stone Lee Stone Pharoahe Monch
7 "Hell" T. Jamerson, G. Williams, L. Stone Lee Stone Pharoahe Monch, Canibus
8 "No Mercy" T. Jamerson, E. Murray, J. Grinnage, A. Maman The Alchemist Pharoahe Monch, M.O.P.
9 "Right Here" T. Jamerson, G. Spivey DJ Scratch Pharoahe Monch
10 "The Next Shit" T. Jamerson, T. Smith, L. Stone Pharoahe Monch, Lee Stone Pharoahe Monch, Busta Rhymes
11 "The Ass" T. Jamerson, A. Smith, J. Kirkland Diamond D Pharoahe Monch, Apani B. Fly
12 "The Light" T. Jamerson, J. Kirkland Diamond D Pharoahe Monch
13 "God Send" T. Jamerson, L. Baskerville, L. Stone Lee Stone, Pharoahe Monch Pharoahe Monch, Prince Po
14 "The Truth" T. Jamerson, L. Lynn, T.K. Greene, J. Kirkland Diamond D Pharoahe Monch, Common, Talib Kweli
15 "Simon Says [Remix]" T. Jamerson, Lady Luck, R. Noble, C. Smith, M. Vialva, T. Smith, L. Stone Pharoahe Monch Pharoahe Monch, Lady Luck, Redman, Method Man, Shabaam Sahdeeq, Busta Rhymes

Album singles

Single information
"Simon Says"
  • Released: 1999
  • B-side: "Behind Closed Doors"
"The Light"
  • Released: 2000
  • B-side: "Right Here (Remix)" (featuring Xzibit), "Livin' It Up"

Music videos

  • "Simon Says" (1999, director: Busta Rhymes)
  • "The Light" (2000, director: Jeff Richter)

Album chart positions

Year Album Chart positions
Billboard 200 Top R&B/Hip Hop Albums
1999 Internal Affairs 41 6

Singles chart positions

Year Song Chart positions
Billboard Hot 100 Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks Hot Rap Singles
1999 "Simon Says" 97 29 3
2000 "The Light" - - 30

References

  1. ^ [1]

 
 

 

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 "Internal Affairs (album)" Read more