2004, Mo Wax
CLASSIC. As a suburban Californian kid, DJ Shadow tended to treat hip-hop as a musical innovation, not as an explicit social protest, which goes a long way toward explaining why his debut album "Endtroducing..." sounded like nothing else at the time of its release. Using hip-hop -- not only its rhythms but also its cut-and-paste techniques as a foundation -- Shadow created a deep, endlessly intriguing world on "Endtroducing," one where there are no musical genres, only shifting sonic textures and styles. Shadow created the entire album from samples, almost all pulled from obscure, forgotten vinyl, and the effect is that of a hazy, half-familiar dream — parts of the record sound familiar, yet it's clear that it only suggests music you've heard before, and that the multi-layered samples and genres create something new.
Tracklisting
Disc 1
| 1 | Best Foot Forward | PLAY |
| 2 | Building Steam With a Grain of Salt | PLAY |
| 3 | Number Song | PLAY |
| 4 | Changeling | PLAY |
| 5 | What Does Your Soul Look Like, Pt. 4 | PLAY |
| 6 | [Untitled] | |
| 7 | Stem/Long Stem | PLAY |
| 8 | Mutual Slump | PLAY |
| 9 | Organ Donor | PLAY |
| 10 | Why Hip Hop Sucks in '96 | PLAY |
| 11 | Midnight in a Perfect World | PLAY |
| 12 | Napalm Brain/Scatter Brain | PLAY |
| 13 | What Does Your Soul Look Like, Pt. 1: Blue Sky Revisit | PLAY |
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