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| | Soul Food | | | Music Artist : | | Goodie Mob | | Music Style : | | General | | Record Label : | | Arista | | Release Date : | | 1995-11-07 | | Store Price : | | $8.99 | | Artistopia's Price: $8.98 | | Usually ships in 24 hours | | |
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CD Tracks/Songs
Disc 11. Free 2. Thought Process 3. Red Dog 4. Dirty South 5. Cell Therapy 6. Sesame Street 7. Guess Who 8. Serenity Prayer 9. Fighting 10. Blood 11. Live at the O.M.N.I. 12. Goodie Bag 13. Soul Food 14. Funeral 15. I Didn't Ask to Come 16. Rico 17. Coming 18. Cee-Lo 19. Day After
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Other Artist Albums
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Customer Reviews of This Album/CD |
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Great Album Submitted on: 2009-09-24 |
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| I first heard this album three years ago and was blown away by it. The production as well as the lyrics are great. Most importantly the songs are actually about something and seem to have meaning to each artist. For instance on Guess Who each member briefly describes growing up and how they love their mothers'. This type of sincere honesty is not usually a characteristic of rap. In my opinion all of the songs are great but my personal favorites are Dirty South, Guess Who and The Day After. If you are a fan of good music, regardless of genre or region, you should give this album a try. |
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Scandelicious! Submitted on: 2007-05-17 |
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This is one of the very best albums of all time. Hands down. It is not only Goodie Mob at their very best-- but it is also RAP MUSIC at its very best. These boys can WRITE SOME SERIOUS LYRICS... and they KNOW BEATS TO SING OVER.
I was pretty disappointed with both following albums-- but Soul Food will NEVER GET OLD, and it is untouchable. Lyrics read like a moving novel.
A must-have-- no question. |
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Get yourself a plate of this Submitted on: 2006-11-09 |
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| Standout Tracks:THOUGHT PROCESS, DIRTY SOUTH, CELL THERAPY, SESAME STREET, GUESS WHO, FIGHTING(the deepest song on here), LIVE AT THE OMNI, GOODIE BAG, I DIDNT ASK TO COME and THE DAY AFTER. Filler: None. Bottom Line: Goodie Mob's debut album is proof that not everybody out of the south is a party and bulls*** lifestyle living fool. This whole album is mostly social and political commentary just the way any diehard fan of conscious rap likes it. Ceelo, Khujo, Gipp and T-mo give you some solid gems in songs like Thought Process, Dirty South, Cell Therapy, Fighting, Live At The Omni etc. This album is definitely for you if you're looking for a break from the mainstream crap radio shoves down your throat! |
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Soul Food... Submitted on: 2006-10-15 |
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| This is a classic release from the illest group in the south. Everybody needs to cop this today! If you don't you'll be missin out on the best beats and legendary songs. This album defines 5-star standards. ATL's Finest, No Doubt. Peace |
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"We ain't natural born killas. We are a spiritual people." Submitted on: 2006-08-29 |
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Onstage at First Avenue Nightclub in Minneapolis, Goodie Mob's Cee-Lo Green lifts up his shirt to reveal a spare tire's worth of brown skin hanging over his jeans as, accompanied by a live band and with a big smile on his face, he rap croons the chorus of the group's hit single: "Come and get yo' soul food, well, well / Good old-fashioned soul food, all right.". Ten minutes later, the playful moment is long gone. After asking if there are and "revolutionaries of the mind" in the house, Cee-Lo delivers a blistering sermon disguised as an a cappella rap to the integrated all ages crowd: "Yeah, it's true, Uncle Sam wants you to be a devil too..... There's evil white folk just like there's evil black folk. All you soldiers, take responsibility for your own actions. White people know more about black history than you do; whose fault is that?..... We ain't natural born kilas, we are a spiritual people."
The members of Goodie Mob are part of a new generation of black musicians who make no distinction between hip hop and rhythm & blues in their music, a generation able to see the failed hopes of the civil rights movement and the gangsta backlash it generated through the same historical prism. The result is Soul Food, a debut that opens and closes with optimistic gospel based anthems sandwiched around tracks that range from "Guess Who", an unabashed homage to mothers, to "Live At The O.M.N.I.", a raging screed against black cops and other "devils" in the "system". Songs are rapped or sung as the occasion warrants, and are backed by a blend of sampled beats and live instrumentation. It's an ambitious hybrid with an organic cohesion stemming from the group's common roots: the four members of Goodie Mob (Cee-Lo, Khujo, Big Gipp, T-Mo) have known each other since most of them were attending classes at Benjamin Elijah High School in Atlanta.
After the show, T-Mo explains how the four Goodie Mob members often deliver distinctive but complementary raps within a single song: "We all grew up in the same `hood during the same time period, so we experienced maybe not the exact same thing, but most of the same type of vibe."
Cee-Lo: "We don't want to take credit; we have been led to speak, as a sign of the times. We needed a new form of music, a new expression. People are starting to deal with the whole music instead of just rap. Rap is like the paper on the outside of the box; we have to deal with the gift. Rhythm & blues just means rhythm and pain, rhythm and truth, rhythm and emotion. When there are divisions in [styles of] music there is stagnation."
Asked if growing up in Atlanta - the paragon of the New South with a growing tradition of black elected officials - has made a difference in their work, the group members guffaw in unison: "Naw, that's all an illusion, like everything else.". Big Gipp adds: "We deal with the real and that is that everybody is going through the same exact thing, the same pain. The object of Soul Food is to get people to think about change."
And to pay tribute along the way. Khujo states: "Soul Food is dedicated to our mommas. "Guess Who" is like the moral to everybody's whole story, because you don't get but one momma; she brought you in and you've got to treat her with the utmost. That's who fed us before we started eatin' McDonald's and Kentucky Fried Chicken, and that's where soul food comes from, that recipe, the patience and the time that is invested." (- Britt Robson) |
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