Shopping > Music > Digable Planets > Blowout Comb

Digable Planets - Blowout Comb (CD)

Album Details: Blowout Comb

Release Date:10/18/1994
Label:Capitol
UPC:724383065424

Other Available Formats: Blowout Comb

User Reviews: Blowout Comb

  • Overall:

    Great Elements of Hip Hop!

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Feb 16, 2002

    Decent album but some of the beats are boring. Digable Planets were a very soulful and jazz oriented hip hop group. I like their first album better but this was slickly produced. My favorite songs are "Borough Check", "Dial 7" and "For Corners". I li...ke the way they sampled 'We Live In Brookyn' on "Borough Check"(Even though Smif N Wessun sample it just as good on their debut). I wish they were still around. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Straight up chill from start to finish,G

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Jan 25, 2002

    This cd is truly the best of its kind. Soul, Hip-hop, and funk all in one; straight up chill from start to finish. Gotta hear it!

Pro Reviews: Blowout Comb

  • All Music Guide

    Media darlings after the commercial success of their debut, Digable Planets attempted to prove their artistic merit with this second album, and succeeded wildly. A worthy, underrated successor, Blowout Comb was just as catchy and memorable as their first, and also offered the perfect response to critics and hip-hop fans who complained they weren't "real" enough. Except for a dark, indecipherable single named "Dial 7 (Axioms of Creamy Spies)," Blowout Comb excelled at pushing great grooves over sunny-day party jams, even when the crew was providing deft social commentary -- as on "Black Ego" and "Dial 7 (Axioms of Creamy Spies)." The trio used their greater clout to invite instrumentalists instead of relying completely on samples, and the music took on more aspects of the live jam than before. Though Blowout Comb still borrowed a host of riffs from great jazz anthems (from Bob James to Bobbi Humphrey), Digable Planets used them well, as beds for their back-and-forth freestyling and solo...s from guests. The Digables remade Roy Ayers' "We Live in Brooklyn, Baby" into "Borough Check," and invited Guru from Gang Starr to salute Brooklyn's block-parties and barbershops. (The focus on the neighborhood even carried over to the liner notes, laid out like a community newspaper.) The closer, a brassy, seven-minute "For Corners," also captured that fleeting feeling of neighborhood peace. Though Blowout Comb lacked the commercial punch of Reachin', Digable Planets made great strides in the two areas they'd previously been criticized: beats and rhymes. The beats were incredible, some of the best ever heard on a rap record, a hip-hop version of the classic, off-kilter, New Orleans second-line funk. The productions, all crafted by the group themselves, were laid-back and clearly superior to much hip-hop of the time. The raps, though certainly not hardcore, were just as intelligent as on the debut, and flowed much better. While Reachin' came to sound like a moment in time for the jazz-rap crowd, Blowout Comb has remained a timeless classic. - John Bush, All Music Guide Read more Less

Compare Prices: Blowout Comb

Store Store Rating Price Notes/Coupons

DeepDiscount.com

36 Ratings

(30 Reviews)

Write a review

$8.36Total Price N/A New Item

4 Coupons & Deals

sale 25% off music, free shipping
Go to Store

Tower Records

51 Ratings

(41 Reviews)

Write a review

$9.98Total Price N/A New Item free us shipping for items over $25!!! Go to Store

Amazon.com Marketplace

48 Ratings

(29 Reviews)

Write a review

$7.24Total Price N/A New Item

4 Coupons & Deals

fantastic prices with ease & comfort of amazon
Go to Store

Rate & Write a Review: Blowout Comb

All fields marked with * are required
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
Maximum of 4,000 characters
Cancel

Rate & Write a Review: Blowout Comb

Thank You. Your review has been posted.
View your postClose

Biography

Digable Planets

Though they were not the first to synthesize jazz and hip-hop, Digable Planets epitomized the laid-back charm of jazz hipsters better than any group before or since. The trio's 1993 debut album, Reachin' (A New Refutation of Time and Space), was a mellow ride packed with samples from Art Blakey, Sonny Rollins, and Curtis Mayfield, and the single "Rebirth of Slick (Cool ... Read more