The Mix Tape

RELEASE
September 28, 2004
LABEL
Ichiban/Ryko
GENRES
Rap, Gangsta Rap, Dirty South

Album Review

This is getting slightly ridiculous. 2004's The Mix Tape is the third compilation covering MC Breed's early-to-mid-'90s career on the Wrap label. However, after 1995's remix-heavy The Best of Breed and 2002's Chopped and Screwed (which was part of the short-lived fad, led by the late DJ Screw, of slowing down records until they had the woozy, disorienting feel of a cough-syrup high), The Mix Tape is really the first single-disc sampler that presents the rapper's best tracks in their original and best versions. MC Breed's gift is his musical dexterity as much as his lyrical skills: 1991's "Ain't No Future in Yo Frontin'" pointedly uses elements from both the East Coast and West Coast hip-hop styles of the time to comment on the uselessness of turf wars, and although later records find the Michigan native rebased in Atlanta and incorporating more of a Dirty South funk flair to his music, songs like the chilling, piano-based "Everyday Ho" and the P-Funk style of "This Is How We Do It, Pt. 1" show that MC Breed is never completely beholden to one style.
Stewart Mason, Rovi

Track Listing

  1. Teach My Kids
  2. This Is How We Do It, Pt. 1
  3. Just Kickin' It
  4. Game for Life
  5. Real MC
  6. Ain't Too Much Worried
  7. Night Life
  8. Comin Real Again
  9. Seven Years
  10. One Time
  11. Say What
  12. Everyday Ho
  13. Conclusions
  14. Tight
  15. Gotta Get Mine
  16. Late Night Creep
  17. What You Want
  18. Ain't No Future in Yo Frontin'
  19. Outro