I got to thinking the other day about how I apparently really like
to buy the same album two or three times. In these days where most
people have a hard enough time buying one copy of a particular CD, I'll
often have two or maybe even three copies of certain CDs. Now I should
stop and mention that what happens is I get suckered in for a "special
edition" of the album I already bought, specifically a special edition
of a classic hip hop album.
The epic deluxe version of Mecca and the Soul Brother. |
The quality on these releases vary. The Beastie Boys put out
loaded two-disc sets of their second through fifth albums (with the
exception of Paul's Boutique, which was left untouched due to laws
surrounding the heavily sampling on that album from the epic "Wild West,
anything goes" days of sampling), Run-DMC released single discs of
their first four albums with outstanding bonus tracks and liner notes
(you're not a hip hop fan if you didn't get excited to hear their
original version of "Slow and Low" that was later covered by said
Beasties), and we saw really great versions of Criminal Minded by
KRS-One and Mecca and the Soul Brother by Pete Rock & CL Smooth
last year. I would be remiss in not mentioning the outstanding
two-disc version of Paid in Full as well.
As good as these are, there are some other re-releases that have too
many holes to really be worth the re-purchase. For example, Priority
created special editions of Ice Cube's first four albums that are great
if you didn't have the records, but offer little to those of who had
those albums as well as his already released b-sides collection. The
NWA special editions weren't any great shakes either. Other artists
like Public Enemy and LL Cool J are begging to have special editions
done of some of their classic albums, but thanks to the ineptitude of
Def Jam, these will never see the light of day. (Speaking of ineptitude
at Def Jam, I'm listening to Big Boi's album from last year and I'll
never figure out how this wasn't a huge hit for that label.).
So as I am wont to do, I got to thinking about how cool it would be
to see a special version of 3 Years. The special edition serves one of
two purposes in my mind- it either pays tribute to a great album that
everyone agrees is a classic or it turns one's eyes back to a forgotten
or should've been classic album. In the case of 3 Years, I would argue
that it's a forgotten classic- I think most people forget how good that
album was and how it influenced the entire South to eventually become
the dominant force in hip hop- not that I would necessarily brag too
loudly on that point at times :)
Anyway, with all of the b-sides and so forth that we have at are
disposal, I thought it would be kind of cool to put together our own
version of what a special edition of 3 Years would look like. I
honestly think my dream job would be putting together these kinds of
projects for record labels (it's a great revenue opportunity for a dying
business- Def Jam in and of itself is sitting on a gold mine, for
starters). And they say your dream job would be something that you
would do for free, so on that note here is how I would put together a
Special Deluxe Super Duper Ultimate Definitive Collector's Edition of 3
Years, 5 Months, & 2 Days In the Life Of....
Now, keep in mind- I do not have access to any archives where there
may or may not be demos, unfinished tracks, completed songs that were
unreleased, etc. So we'll just have to do the best we can with what has
been released through b-sides and other means- which means lots and
lots of remixes on this hypothetical release.
Disc one is easy of course- the full album, plus the Metamorphosis
Remix of "People Everyday" that was included on later pressings of the
album. As far as disc two, this is what I would do for a track listing:
1. Revolution (from Malcolm X of course. This one is a no-brainer
and as discussed in the past, was on the bonus disc of the Japanese
"deluxe edition."
2. Tennessee (Dred and Funk remix). Also on that Japanese edition as well as....
3. People Everyday (Maroon Mix). Now on to other tracks.
4. Oh No. This is from Bebe's Kids and is basically an instrumental piece, but it's from the 3 Years era so it works.
5. Mr. Wendal (Perfecto Mix)
6. Tennessee (Pirate Radio Mix)
7. Fishin' For Religion (Remix) -From the "Natural" single as well as Extended Revolution
8. Revolution (Another Perspective Mix)- From the Revolution single
9. Tennessee (Back to Roots Mix)
10. Mr. Wendal (Hip Hop Drum Attack)
11. Natural (The Natural Way) - From the "Natural" single
12. Tennessee (Showbiz Remix) - From the single
13. Tennessee (For DJ's Only) - Also from the single
14. Natural (The Drums of Change)
15. Revolution (Instrumental)
16. Natural (The Natural Way Instrumental)
I am working on getting these added to one handy dandy folder on Mediafire for those interested and I'll let you know when it's ready- many of the songs are already there and all have been posted here before.
So without being able to get into the archives, as previously
mentioned, I think that's about what you'd end up with. Obviously, if
there were things out there, you'd be able to go into a lot of
directions with it, but even with that limitation, I think you get a decent package for
a special edition. If it ever happened, I think I just earned myself
an executive producer credit.... :) At some point, I might do this
with Zingalamaduni as well, since there's some good stuff out there for
that one.
2 comments:
Wow, I absolutely love the things you reveal in this blog. Good special edition, and I never knew Run DMC first did slow & low! Is that really true? Thanks for the insight! You're a true music fan!
The bishop
Thanks Bishop, I appreciate that. Yeah, basically Run-DMC did the song and decided not to use it, but the Beasties heard it and asked if they could cover it, and they ran with it. They only changed two lines, one of which was "Dee sees real good because he has 4 eyes" to "White Castle fries come in only one size." Here's a link to the demo by Run-DMC: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oVpDG8FBZWQ
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