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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Some Grown Man "ish"
When De la drops an album I'm gonna cop it. They've earned that much. Even if I ain't quite feeling it on the first few spins, first few months even, at some point it's gonna hit me. It's inevitable with these guys. This album is no exception. It's at once introspective, reverential, playful, raunchy, and definitely intelligent. In fact, as I crossed into my 30's...
Published on December 27, 2001 by mrdilettante

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Sad Sad Sad
This album makes me very sad. Its really horrible to hear such a great, once innovative group make an album that is so...blah. The vibrant neon colors of the first three albums are now washed to grey. The production, for the most part is pedestrian, and De La sound like tired old men. This album is very unfortunate. They need to get some hip hop viagra.
Published on June 21, 2002 by MikeGibbons


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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Some Grown Man "ish", December 27, 2001
By 
"mrdilettante" (Lost Angeles, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Art Official Intelligence: Bionix (Audio CD)
When De la drops an album I'm gonna cop it. They've earned that much. Even if I ain't quite feeling it on the first few spins, first few months even, at some point it's gonna hit me. It's inevitable with these guys. This album is no exception. It's at once introspective, reverential, playful, raunchy, and definitely intelligent. In fact, as I crossed into my 30's this year it stands to reason that De La is probably one of the few groups out there who aren't afraid to act their age. I was touched by "Am I Worth it to You" and felt like "Trying People" was speaking directly to a brotha.

Now I'm not knocking certain rappers who cater to the youth market with "money, hoes, & clothes" (I can't front, I want 'em too). However, when it comes to saying what's really on a thirty something black man's noggin' and doing so without getting too self-righteous, De La's always been on point. "Baby Phat" gives a bouncing and long overdue shout to the thickness out there and "Pawn Star", Slick Rick on "What We Do", and B-Real on "Peer Pressure" keep the flow light but still on point.

What gets slept on with these guys also is their production skills. "Simply Having"'s Paul McCartney sample is infectious and genius and "The Sauce" is butta. But I can't say enough about the thoughtful and cleverness of the lyrics.

All in all, they are just professionals. If you've slept on the Soul over the years, just go back and get the entire catalog...you'll eventually grow into it.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Hip-hop for truly mature audiences only., April 20, 2005
This review is from: Art Official Intelligence: Bionix (Audio CD)
I find that the main things about "getting" De La Soul's brand of hip-hop are:

1. They are cerebral rappers, forcing you to thorougly chew their lyrics before mental-digestion in order to understand their perspective.

2. At the time of this writing, they are well into their 30s (Pos was born "Out of the heavens August one-seven, sixty-nine... ") and have been in the game for 16 years, almost unheard of today (outside of LL, Dr. Dre, Snoop, and a few others, who even comes close).

Accordingly, they tend to rhyme about things that their peers can relate to, especially if said peers are trying to "make it" in life. Unfortunately for De La - like Dave says in Bionix - they have had to "get on that ol' bulls--t" to get the later generations used to their flow.

My take? This is one of their better efforts, though it does not crack the the top three for me*. I won't go into detail about the tracks, except to say that I regard "Held Down" and "Tryin' People" as two of the finest songs I've heard recently. Many won't get the cleverness of "Peer Pressure", or the satire of the (overly?) explicit "Pawn Star", and will criticize the R&B-tainted "Special", but you can't please all the people all the time.

Bottom line: if you fit the demographic, or don't but appreciate the music of those that do, then pick up the CD. The more you listen, the more you will appreciate it.


* My preference:

1. "De La Soul Is Dead": outstanding ode to how De La Soul as everyone knew them (DaISY Age) was no more; clever, witty, though some of the skits went over the heads of those outside of the NY tri-state area, or those that don't know of De La's background (i.e., they used to work at Burger King... )

2. "Buhloone Mind State": severly under-rated recording that comments on what's wrong in the hip-hop industry; sadly, still applicable today. So on-point, that Tommy Boy didn't know how to promote it! ("It might blow-up but it won't go 'pop'")

3. "Three Feet High & Rising": only rated number three because I don't play it as much anymore; the first, the innovative, the album some people are STILL trying to understand after 16 years.

4. "AOI: Bionix, Part 2"

5. "Stakes Is High" - the first post-Prince Paul production, where De La tries re-establish themselves; weak in spots, but overall quite good, especially cameos from Common & Mos Def.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not the best, not the worst, December 9, 2001
By 
This review is from: Art Official Intelligence: Bionix (Audio CD)
Whenever De La Soul releases an album it will always be compared to 3 Feet High & De La Soul Is Dead. Those were 2 of the greatest albums ever made and after that De La never really got that magic back. Buhloone had its moments (though it was a little on the short side) and Stakes Is High was solid. But there was always something missing. Then they dropped Mosaic Thump and (while still pretty good) it was their worst album yet.

As for Bionix, well it's an improvement over Mosaic. While Mosaic didn't have any great songs, besides Foolin', Bionix has a couple with Trying, Held Down, and Bionix. Also through the first 12 tracks there isn't a bad song among the group (well a couple actually are barely above that level). However the next two (Pawn Star and What We Do) are definite songs to skip. Another thing is that the skits on this album just didn't make much sense and only It's American was entertaining.

So I give this album 3 and a half stars and rate it ahead of Mosaic Thump while behind their first 4 albums.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars AOI-Part Two, December 13, 2001
This review is from: Art Official Intelligence: Bionix (Audio CD)
For the second installment in their Art Official Intelligence trilogy, De La Soul go back to an old school style. They are just letting their rhymes rule. Mosaic Thump had numerous guest MC's, but outside a couple of guests, Bionix lets Dave and Pos flow. There are some goofy tunes like "Baby Phat" and "Pawn Star", but the album has a deeper feel. Songs like "Am I Worth You?", "Held Down" and "Trying People" have a weight and depth to them. De La Soul is always at their best when they are making social commentary and while Bionix is not Stakes Is High or De La Soul Is Dead, it is a strong album.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars De La Groundbreaker, December 5, 2001
This review is from: Art Official Intelligence: Bionix (Audio CD)
This new De La album, while not song for song superior to all the rest, when taken as a whole, as a concept record, is the best they've done. And what a concept it is. De La meditates on Love, Lust, Temptation, Happiness and Humility. The songs waft in and out of each other as do the skits, which before, as in De La is Dead, used to be a separate from the whole. A unifying theme that would tie the album together. But on the new album, the skits and samples are part of the music and part of the concept. Rather than acting as this entity that sort of sits like an outside perspective of the album, as with the Van Dam kids on Dead or the game show skits on 3 Feet High, the Bionix skits are woven in and complement the songs, literally and figuratively, which in of itself is different. The Rev. Do Good skits are funny, but not overbearing and float in and out of the album in seamless fashion. And rather than retread the same territory as Mosaic Thump--much in the way Tribe rewrote Midnight Marauders on Beats Rhymes--Bionix makes a few winks in Thump's direction without beating you on the head with heavy trilogy concept. Wait until you hear what they did with the Ghost Weed skit! Hilarious! Then you have the cameos. Slick Rick is awesome, his song catchy as all hell. And then the surprise hit of the season: B Real is actually good! The last time he was good, let's face it, was the first Cypress album! Oh yeah, ok, and on the Beastie Boys remix of So Whatcha Want. I think his appearance here works because he is playing the B Real character and it's not just a guest spot featuring rock icon B Real. You know what I'm saying? Rather than 'here's a song and B Real is on it,' again we come back to how everything is woven into the concept, and B Real is woven into the song as a counterpoint character, kind of like the Bittie character in Bitties in the BK Lounge. Another thing that makes this a brilliant album is it's experimental qualities, which could be redundant when you're talking about De La. Experimental De La. Well, they're always a step ahead, what else is new? But I mean, they throw in so many new elements and textures that on paper might not work, but work because they are the sum of the whole. Gospel creeps in all over the album, especially kickin' on the Al Green-style Held Down. There are Latin influences. Soul. Phil Spector-ish beats. Even R&B. What? R&B on a De La album?? Again, it's the sum of the whole that makes it work. Song for song, Stakes is High is hard to beat. But here is something different. And I know it's early to say because De La albums take time to distill like a fine ale before their full body comes to the palate, but I'm putting Bionix up there with some of their best, if not the best taken as a whole. All I have left to say is that I can't wait for the third installment of AOI so I can throw them all in the carousel, play them back to back and hear the genius--finally--fully realized.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars 5 stars to make up for unfair, ignorant low marks, January 12, 2005
By 
DukeOfEarl (Phoenix, AZ United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Art Official Intelligence: Bionix (Audio CD)
Okay, maybe this album by De La Soul is closer to a 4, but it is still very strong. In 2001, De La quietly dropped this second installment in the AOI series after the first one garnered them some long-lost mainstream attention the year before. This is being called by many here as 'their worst album,' and if this is so, it only shows how incredible their catalog is. I mean, really, Posdnous and Dave are MC'in at as high a level as they ever have for the majority of this showing. The production, MOSTLY handled by Dave West and De La themselves, is entertaining and outstanding on a few tracks.
I can see a reason for the choice low grades because people were disgusted by the track "Pawn Star." I wasn't feeling it either, but this track is just like "De La Orgee" only with some explicit lyrics. I think nobody expected this from such upstanding individuals at this stage in their career. Nobody seemed to complain about "Orgee" of their debut album, but everybody seemed to be fainting in light of "Pawn Star." Sure, I know there's some hidden joke behind it, which isn't necessary, so it should have been left off. De La should simply get a slap on the wrist for this, but we shouldn't be calling for their heads. I can see if people didn't like the controversial "Peer Pressure"(w/ B-Real). I liked it, though, especially how Pos keeps his head admist the pressure from B-Real and Maseo. It's obvious that this track is like reverse-psychology regarding smoking weed. It's trying to demonstrate how smokers try to get others to join with them because they are lonely and empty. Then De La really takes a shot at smokers with the following interlude, "It's American."
As a whole, we witness De La taking it to their highest soulful and inspirational level with the three standout tracks, "Held Down,"(ft. Cee-Lo) "Am I Worth You,"(ft. Glenn Lewis) and "Trying People." All three rank among De La's greatest works. "Held Down" especially for Posdnous' lyrics and the choir, and "Trying People" because it is moving(and humbling). I am hypnotized by the beautiful surreal and melodic beat of "Am I Worth You"(prod. by Dave West) which should make Pete Rock happy. The chorus is hit-or-miss. I like it.
Otherwise, the title track starts it all off and is awesome, especially Pos' verse("if I ever joined a gang, it would be Gang Starr" etc.) The main single "Baby Phat"(ft. Devin the Dude and Yummy) is a little lusty, but smooth and memorable. The racy "What We Do (For Love)" with fellow old-schooler Slick Rick is similar, but I can see if some are turned off by this song. "Special"(ft. Yummy) is nice. It has sincere lyrics by Dave and Pos, but it might be one R&B chorus too-much. "Watch Out" has a unique hook and really gets rolling with Dave and Pos' second verses on the song, while "The Sauce" is a slick, short song with Philly Black that is satisfying. "Simply" is one of the great tracks here. It's upbeat and a little poppy, but calls upon the vibes of a "Me Myself & I" to liven the mood.
De La shows signs of the "De La Soul Is Dead" days with the Reverand Do Good skits, and especially the "It's American" skit. They do some uncanny solo joints like Pos on "Held Down," the one-verse of "Simply Havin,"(a short update of A Tribe Called Quest's "Footprints") and Maseo, B-Real, and Pos without Dave on "Peer Pressure." Just Dave and Shell Council participate in the infamous "Pawn Star." In case y'all didn't notice, De La was taking a different direction as always with "AOI: Bionix." You don't just have to be a blind De La fan to enjoy this, you just have to know your Hiphop music. Like all their others, this album is essential because of it's creativity and unique place in the De La catalog. It quickly went out of print due to the low-marketing and the collapse of Tommy Boy. The overall soul and insight put this cd over the top, and make your quickly forget about the couple controversial songs. HEADS: don't sleep, realize that this De La album may be hard to find, but it definitely deserves your time!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars DIFFERENT is as De La does, July 11, 2003
By 
LG (Trenton, NJ United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Art Official Intelligence: Bionix (Audio CD)
What makes De La who they are is their constant reinvention of themselves and consequently the hip-hop sound. Don't expect Bionix to sound like 3 Feet High or Rising or De La Soul is Dead. Bionix dosen't even sound like Art Official Intelligence. Similar but different. And when the third installment of AOI comes out it'll sounds different too. That's what makes De La De La. And they sampled a Christmas song on this album! That takes some serious [*]. And not the ones you hang on a Christmas tree. Tracks Bionix and My Writes hang with their best and anybody's best. Go back and listen to those tracks again.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Sad Sad Sad, June 21, 2002
This review is from: Art Official Intelligence: Bionix (Audio CD)
This album makes me very sad. Its really horrible to hear such a great, once innovative group make an album that is so...blah. The vibrant neon colors of the first three albums are now washed to grey. The production, for the most part is pedestrian, and De La sound like tired old men. This album is very unfortunate. They need to get some hip hop viagra.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Taking Hip Hop To a Higher Level!!!, December 10, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Art Official Intelligence: Bionix (Audio CD)
They did it agian!!! De La continues to push the envelope with installmet 2 of AOI. From the Introduction, all the way to "Trying People" they have you excited to hear what's next. On "Simply" Dave will have you breaking out those old Nice & Smooth albums, when he delivers a flow reminicsant of Greg Nice, and Smooth B ("if you ain't from our era then your up sh*&ts creek"). Your neck does'nt evan get a break when "Simply" blends right into "Simply Havin", which the backdrop is a beat from A Tribe Called Quest's "Peoples Instinctive Travels" LP.
Cee Lo comes through on a melodic, thought provoking track. Which will make it hard not to hit the reverse button to hear it again.

Amittyville's finest saves the best for last on the uplifting "Trying" which chorus could possibbly be compared to the UMC's "Never Never Land", as the children take heed from the conches MC's you feel the Dave, and Pos have knowledge, and comfort, expressing themselves than the average MC.

Fellas, keep doing your thing. AOI Part III coming Soon!!!

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The 2nd one is the charm!!, December 9, 2001
By 
"nova950" (Ground Zero.....NYC!!!!) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Art Official Intelligence: Bionix (Audio CD)
Don't get me wrong. I thought AOI:Mosiac Thump was okay. They had a few standout cuts on it. But this one AOI:Bionix is much "better, stronger,....faster"!! De La did their thing on this one. A good mix of good ol'fashion lyrics that De La only provides, with up to date production, and even soul sounding R&B to go along with it!! The cuts that standout to me are (in no particular order) "Baby Phat", "Watch Out", with the Latin-feel to it, "The Sauce", "What We Do(for love)" w/ Slick Rick - Slick Rick did his thing on that on, "Peer Pressure"w/B-Real of Cypress Hill (that was real good), but the real deal is what my peoples Deaf 2 U produced "Trying People". The Rev. Do Good skits are funny also. The other cuts are very good too but those are my favorites. De La continues to stay a step ahead. And they are very good at keeping their sound fresh. So to anyone who liked the first installment, you will definetly feel Bionix!!

Note: To my peeps of Deaf 2 U Productions. (Luck, Purple, and Van)"Trying People" That is a hot beat!!(...)

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Art Official Intelligence: Bionix
Art Official Intelligence: Bionix by De La Soul (Audio CD - 2001)
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