Beastie Boys - Check Your Head (2009 Remastered Edition Bonus Disc) (1992/2009)
Artist: Beastie Boys
Title: Check Your Head (2009 Remastered Edition Bonus Disc)
Year Of Release: 1992/2009
Label: Capitol Records
Genre: Hip-Hop
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks) (tracks+digital booklet)
Total Time: 01:52:43
Total Size: 263 mb | 668 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Check Your Head (2009 Remastered Edition Bonus Disc)
Year Of Release: 1992/2009
Label: Capitol Records
Genre: Hip-Hop
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks) (tracks+digital booklet)
Total Time: 01:52:43
Total Size: 263 mb | 668 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
CD1
01. Beastie Boys - Jimmy James (Remastered 2009)
02. Beastie Boys - Funky Boss (Remastered 2009)
03. Beastie Boys - Pass The Mic (Remastered 2009)
04. Beastie Boys - Gratitude (Remastered 2009)
05. Beastie Boys - Lighten Up (Remastered 2009)
06. Beastie Boys - Finger Lickin' Good (Remastered 2009)
07. Beastie Boys - So What'Cha Want (Remastered 2009)
08. Beastie Boys - The Biz Vs. The Nuge (Remastered 2009)
09. Beastie Boys - Time For Livin' (Remastered 2009)
10. Beastie Boys - Something's Got To Give (Remastered 2009)
11. Beastie Boys - The Blue Nun (Remastered 2009)
12. Beastie Boys - Stand Together (Remastered 2009)
13. Beastie Boys - Pow (Remastered 2009)
14. Beastie Boys - The Maestro (Remastered 2009)
15. Beastie Boys - Groove Holmes (Remastered 2009)
16. Beastie Boys - Live At P.J.'s (Remastered 2009)
17. Beastie Boys - Mark On The Bus (Remastered 2009)
18. Beastie Boys - Professor Booty (Remastered 2009)
19. Beastie Boys - In 3's (Remastered 2009)
20. Beastie Boys - Namaste (Remastered 2009)
CD2
01. Beastie Boys - Dub The Mic (Instrumental)
02. Beastie Boys - Pass The Mic (Pt. 2, Skills To Pay The Bills)
03. Beastie Boys - Drunken Praying Mantis Style (Instrumental)
04. Beastie Boys - Netty's Girl
05. Beastie Boys - The Skills To Pay The Bills
06. Beastie Boys - So What'Cha Want (Soul Assassin Remix Version)
07. Beastie Boys - So What'Cha Want (Butt Naked Version)
08. Beastie Boys - Groove Holmes (Live Vs. The Biz)
09. Beastie Boys - So What'Cha Want (All The Way Live Freestyle Version)
10. Beastie Boys - Stand Together (Live)
11. Beastie Boys - Finger Lickin' Good (Government Cheese Remix)
12. Beastie Boys - Gratitude (Live At Budokan)
13. Beastie Boys - Honky Rink
14. Beastie Boys - Jimmy James (Original Original Version)
15. Beastie Boys - Boomin' Granny
16. Beastie Boys - Drinkin' Wine (Instrumental)
On Check Your Head’s “Professor Booty,” Mike D raps the Beasties’ mantra: “Life ain’t nothing but a good groove.” The trio returned to their rock-band roots for their third LP, playing its funky, punky, spunky beats themselves. They channel John Bonham’s booming drums on “So What ‘Cha Want,” Black Sabbath’s guitar growl on “Gratitude,” and Bad Brains’ hardcore spirit on their surprising Sly Stone send-up “Time for Livin’.” They also explore lounge-lizard jams and psychedelic jazziness, introducing backward-ball-cap alt-rock kids to new worlds of sound.
Check Your Head brought the Beastie Boys crashing back into the charts and into public consciousness, but that was only partially due to the album itself much of its initial success was due to the cult audience that Paul's Boutique cultivated in the years since its initial flop release, a group of fans whose minds were so thoroughly blown by that record, they couldn't wait to see what came next, and this helped the record debut in the Top Ten upon its April 1992 release. This audience, perhaps somewhat unsurprisingly, was a collegiate Gen-X audience raised on Licensed to Ill and ready for the Beastie Boys to guide them through college. As it happened, the Beasties had repositioned themselves as a lo-fi, alt-rock groove band. They had not abandoned rap, but it was no longer the foundation of their music, it was simply the most prominent in a thick pop-culture gumbo where old school rap sat comfortably with soul-jazz, hardcore punk, white-trash metal, arena rock, Bob Dylan, bossa nova, spacy pop, and hard, dirty funk. What they did abandon was the psychedelic samples of Paul's Boutique, turning toward primitive grooves they played themselves, augmented by keyboardist Money Mark and co-producer Mario Caldato, Jr.. This all means that music was the message and the rhymes, which had been pushed toward the forefront on both Licensed to Ill and Paul's Boutique, have been considerably de-emphasized (only four songs "Jimmy James," "Pass the Mic," "Finger Lickin' Good," and "So What'cha Want" could hold their own lyrically among their previous work). This is not a detriment, because the focus is not on the words, it's on the music, mood, and even the newfound neo-hippie political consciousness. And Check Your Head is certainly a record that's greater than the sum of its parts individually, nearly all the tracks are good (the instrumentals sound good on their subsequent soul-jazz collection, The in Sound From Way Out), but it's the context and variety of styles that give Check Your Head its identity. It's how the old school raps give way to fuzz-toned rockers, furious punk, and cheerfully gritty, jazzy jams. As much as Paul's Boutique, this is a whirlwind tour through the Beasties' pop-culture obsessions, but instead of spinning into Technicolor fantasies, it's earth-bound D.I.Y. that makes it all seem equally accessible which is a big reason why it turned out to be an alt-rock touchstone of the '90s, something that both set trends and predicted them.
Check Your Head brought the Beastie Boys crashing back into the charts and into public consciousness, but that was only partially due to the album itself much of its initial success was due to the cult audience that Paul's Boutique cultivated in the years since its initial flop release, a group of fans whose minds were so thoroughly blown by that record, they couldn't wait to see what came next, and this helped the record debut in the Top Ten upon its April 1992 release. This audience, perhaps somewhat unsurprisingly, was a collegiate Gen-X audience raised on Licensed to Ill and ready for the Beastie Boys to guide them through college. As it happened, the Beasties had repositioned themselves as a lo-fi, alt-rock groove band. They had not abandoned rap, but it was no longer the foundation of their music, it was simply the most prominent in a thick pop-culture gumbo where old school rap sat comfortably with soul-jazz, hardcore punk, white-trash metal, arena rock, Bob Dylan, bossa nova, spacy pop, and hard, dirty funk. What they did abandon was the psychedelic samples of Paul's Boutique, turning toward primitive grooves they played themselves, augmented by keyboardist Money Mark and co-producer Mario Caldato, Jr.. This all means that music was the message and the rhymes, which had been pushed toward the forefront on both Licensed to Ill and Paul's Boutique, have been considerably de-emphasized (only four songs "Jimmy James," "Pass the Mic," "Finger Lickin' Good," and "So What'cha Want" could hold their own lyrically among their previous work). This is not a detriment, because the focus is not on the words, it's on the music, mood, and even the newfound neo-hippie political consciousness. And Check Your Head is certainly a record that's greater than the sum of its parts individually, nearly all the tracks are good (the instrumentals sound good on their subsequent soul-jazz collection, The in Sound From Way Out), but it's the context and variety of styles that give Check Your Head its identity. It's how the old school raps give way to fuzz-toned rockers, furious punk, and cheerfully gritty, jazzy jams. As much as Paul's Boutique, this is a whirlwind tour through the Beasties' pop-culture obsessions, but instead of spinning into Technicolor fantasies, it's earth-bound D.I.Y. that makes it all seem equally accessible which is a big reason why it turned out to be an alt-rock touchstone of the '90s, something that both set trends and predicted them.