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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An Unappreciated Classic,
By Tha Flu (Houston, Texas) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Daily Operation (Audio CD)
4.5 Stars
Step In The Arena was good, but it was also one of those albums in which I thought they could still be better. Gang Starr did just that with one of the dopest Hip Hop albums ever and their best album. Gang Starr is a well renown and influential group, but for some reason, I feel this album is still more unappreciated than it should be. One of the reasons this album is a classic is because it has a variety of subjects. On The Place Where We Dwell, Guru gives an ode to Brooklyn and lets you know why it could be good to visit. Ex Girl To Next Girl is about Guru's relationships with women, but unfortunately, it doesn't work out with none of em. Soliliquy Of Chaos is a very unique song and could be Guru's most thoughtful song ever. He tells us a story about imminently doing a concert, but he sees someone get shot during a fight. After he drops that line, he shows us why it makes him angry because it's so stupid. Personally, I think everyone should hear this track. Take It Personal is a dark-feeling track with Guru talking about someone who backstabbed him, a wack rapper, and a friend who thinks Guru forgot him because of success. He drops 3 verses for each and strictly talks about that person alone. No Shame In My Game is one of the best tracks one album. Guru talks about people who criticize him for being himself and problems in his environment. "But what the hell's success if the mess ain't changing/ 5-0's still corrupt stupid gangs still bangin'/ Stick up kids still stickin' nasty hookers still trickin'/ all the pimps still pimpin' and all the crackheads trippin'/ While the dealers still sellin' so I'll refrain from the yellin'/ And the preachin' cuz who the fu[k would I reach man." The second verse is arguably his most heartfelt verse ever. Conspiracy is another deep track about how the government wants to destroy blacks. "You've got to understand that this has all been conspired/ to put a strain on our brains so that the strong grow tired/ It even exists when you go to your church/ cuz up on the wall a white Jesus lurks." Stay Tuned also has some of the most conscious lyrics I've heard and ends the album perfectly. "Many fall into the vicious cycle/ living by the gun or by the rifle/ They think they got a reason that ain't really sure/ the death toll rises more." The album also has the lyrics in the insert which makes up for any flaw you can detect. About every song is about something different. But, you also have the beats. DJ Premier did a excellent job on Step In The Arena, here he did an OUTSTANDING job. Take It Personal, Take Two And Pass, and the first verse's beat on I'm The Man (the track has three beats for each verse) are strictly imperial beats. Even the skits are dope instrumentals (24-7-365 might break ya speakers). Another thing about DJ Premier is the way he makes use of samples. The way he makes use of samples almost excels the beats he makes. Every sample he uses fits every track perfectly. On Take Two And Pass, he uses a sample that says, "I think, write a rhyme, when I'm done get blunted". The album doesn't exactly have filler, but about 3 songs that are just decent. The best track on this album is difficult to find, but I think The Illest Brother deserves that title. The track is about respect, and things that happen in the ghetto. The beat might take awhile to get into, but Guru's lyrics make it all worthwhile. I'm The Man also has the debut of Lil Dap (from Group Home) and Jeru The Damaja (who does a classic verse) which are the only guest on the entire album. Those who loved Step In The Arena shouldn't worry because Gang Starr elevated their sound lyrically and production wise. Guru proved to be one of the best and most thoughtful lyricists and Premier proved to be one of the best producers/DJs with this masterpiece.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Skillz,
By A Customer
This review is from: Daily Operation (Audio CD)
I just bought this album this year, 2003, and I like it. I'm 17 years old, and alot of kids I know like Lil' Jon and think 50 Cent is the premiere MC. I happen to know extremely differently. I'm not usually into jazz-rap myself, but Tribe and Gang Starr's music is to phenomenal to just pass up. Guru has never been a slouch on the mic to me, and can still kill most of these so called "MC's" out there now. He has skill, passion, focus, and doesn't try to be the realest, but is because he was trying to help the black community on this album, not be the hardest. His rhymes perfectly match Premo's beats on here, some of the smoothest production I've ever heard. This album makes me want to kick a window in sometimes, because I'm so afraid hip-hop will never be quite the same, and though the underground still release some good albums, we never get to hear from alot of the best artists. Anyway, I'm getting off subject. Classic, legendary, masterpiece. They all describe this album. Shout out songs go to Ex Girl To Next Girl, I'm The Man, and No Shame In My Game.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Gang Starr's statement of superiority,
By
This review is from: Daily Operation (Audio CD)
While it wasn't their groundbreaking album (that'd be Step in the Arena) nor their best (in my opinion Moment of Truth), "Daily Operation" is perhaps the most important album of the Gang Starr discography, the one that put them on top of the early-90s east coast hip hop world and established Guru and Premier as hip hop legends. Widely imitated but never duplicated, this album helped define the jazzy hip hop sound that became synonymous with New York hip hop for years to come. Musically "Daily Operation" ranks with Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth's Mecca and the Soul Brother and A Tribe Called Quest's Midnight Marauders as the greatest albums of an era. DJ Premier's productions are incredible, using a wide range of instrumentation including horns, keyboards, and some clever sampling to make a sound that is rich and tasteful, while maintaining a street feel with the grimy hooks and tough drumbeats. Some of these tracks are just masterpieces in themselves, and the prominence of sampled "Daily Operation" beats over the years is a testament to this. Guru holds his own on the mic as always. While not yet the wise teacher he would become on Moment of Truth, Guru drops knowledge and wisdom more than he ever had to this point, but also maintains a foot in the street with his classic bragadagio and battle raps. Religion starts to play a part in some of his rhymes, and he is supported by some guests from the young Gang Starr foundation including Group Home and Jeru the Damaja. This is a rare album where you can just pop it in and play it without ever wanting to skip a track. Overall, "Daily Operation" is fantastic, one of the very greatest albums of hip hop's golden age.
After an instrumental intro, albeit one that shows every bit of Premo's genius, the album begins with the short and gritty "The Place Where We Dwell," where Guru praises his hometown of Brooklyn over a tough, simple beat. "Flip the Script" has a great beat and hook and some nice rhymes, just a solid song. Perhaps the group's best known song appears here, "Ex Girl to Next Girl." This song has gorgeous horns in it, and Guru tells likable tales of female troubles, and this song shows everything lovable about the early-90s rap style. Over truly luscious strings, Guru addresses one of his prevalent pet-peeves, violence at rap concerts, on "Soliloquy of Chaos." Lil Dap and Jeru the Damaja are introduced on "I'm the Man," a great track full of very clever battle raps and punchlines. "Take It Personal" is classic Gang Starr material, preceded and succeeded by two excellent instrumental interludes. "2 Deep" is tough lyrically and rich musically, with horns and plentifully creative sampling. My favorite song may be "No Shame in My Game," mostly just because the beat is perfect. This beat is pure joy on a track. "Conspiracy" shows Guru's increasing social consciousness, addressing media injustice and the SAT's unfairness, and the beat features a very nice keyboard line and horn notes. "The Illest Brother" and "Hardcore Composer" are further classic material, and "B.Y.S." is similarly nice. "Much Too Much" makes a great trombone sample into a loop, and Guru does it justice. The laidback weed ode "Take Two and Pass" rounds out the album along with the closer, "Stay Tuned." All praise that "Daily Operation" has ever received is warranted, but I feel it's still underrated. This album is a classic in every sense of the word. I hate to sound like this, but they really don't make rap albums like this anymore. This is an album I could spend my whole life listening to, in every way it's engineered to perfection. A must buy for any hip hop fan.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The best hip-hop CD ever,
By
This review is from: Daily Operation (Audio CD)
I've been listening to hip hop since 1989, and I feel that this CD is the best hip-hop CD ever released. As a rule, Guru and Premier are both flawless, but this CD is a masterpiece. Guru's delivery is smooth and smoky but very edgy. His rhymes always have a strong message. At the same time, he can still voice a great put down track. He doesn't sing, but somehow he creates the aura of a great jazz singer. Who else can do all this? Premier's work has a minimalistic quality that only works this well in the hands of a truly gifted DJ. His selection of beats, loops, and samples is so varied musically. Unlike today's rap producers who pick a hit song and play it under an MC, Premier pulls together samples and loops to create something new. The tracks cover social issues ("Conspiracy", "Soliloquy of Chaos"), relationships ("Ex Girl to Next Girl"), bragging bravado "Flip the Script" and "BYS"), and more. This is artistry that doesn't forget that great hip-hop always has an streetwise grittyness. Essential for anyone who loves music!
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Gang Starr- Daily Operation,
This review is from: Daily Operation (Audio CD)
Gang Starr's third album "Daily Operation" (1992) is a memorable release. I got into Gang Starr late, starting with "Moment of Truth", which to this day remains my favourite album of there's. DJ Premier and Guru are an excellent duo. At more then a decade old this is a first class oldschool Rap album. Throughout this one Guru's lyrics are on point and make you think, while Premo's beats were before there time and ill. Some of my favourite tracks on this one include:"Soliloquy Of Chaos"- Love the beat to this cut, a track where Guru talks about going out with the Crew. "Take It Personal"- Was watching the video to this track other day, Guru drops some Grimey lyrics, talks about the Rap Game, fake MC's and haters, backed by anothers stellar beat. "No Shame in My Game"- Gang Starr has always kept there music real, basically this ones about Guru repping that, and talking to those who don't. "Conspiracy"- This track just goes deep, Guru talks about alot of things including racism towards blacks, genocide and widescale corruption. "The Illest Brother"- Guru talks about streetlife, death, and lets it be known he will take on all contenders. "Take Two And Pass"- just a ill track about getting blunted, which is backed by a chilled out beat. "Daily Operation" is an album I would recommend for the collection for Gang Starr fans, and those who enjoy quality oldschool Rap. Another thing I enjoy about listening to there music is watching there development, listening to Guru's substantial lyrics, and Premo's trademark beats its nice to see that they are one of those rare groups who evolved there styles and never got played out over what has been an excellent fifteen plus year career. And it is not over yet.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Genesis Of Hip Hop/Jazz,
By WILLIE A YOUNG II "willow" (Houston, TX.) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Daily Operation (Audio CD)
While Guru's "Jazzmatazz" series is often overloaded with guest stars, the note perfect LP's he makes with D.J. Premiere are often near flawless collections of hip hop accented with jazz samples and live instrumentation. While 1994's "Hard To Earn" would move completely away from this sound, this 1992 release finds the Brooklyn duo mining this fertile ground for some of the richest sounds, textures and rhymes to be found anywhere in rap music. Classics like "Ex Girl To Next Girl", "Flip The Script" and "The Place Where We Dwell" are perfect examples of thier sterling approach and perfectionist tendencies. My personal gem from this LP is the side one closing "2 Deep" with it's jazzy cymbals, deep bass drops and regal horn section, you'll want to repeat this one several times. While Guru's laconic flow does grow tiresome over the course of an entire LP, Primo's production chops never cease to amaze and look for a great cameo from Jeru The Damaja on the 3 part brag-fest "I'm The Man" as he drops a funky verse over an old (but brilliantly deployed)Charles Mingus bass sample, it's addictive. The last 10 years have been more than kind to this LP, it's a classic.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
COME ON, NOW!!!!!,
This review is from: Daily Operation (Audio CD)
these negative reviews make me HO HUM!!!! my chest hurts from doing it so much. how does one diss the guru? no, he is not the best mc around, but the man delivered classic material!!!!! he is NOT the worst rapper ever. the man just has his own style. that, again, is what i like about him. mix that with primo's beats, and you have ESSENTIALITY at its best. it is presented brilliantly here.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Gang Starr's best work.,
By Da Bridge "Reveiw Ma$ta" (Charlotte, NC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Daily Operation (Audio CD)
Gang Starr really put out some classic ish here. This is one of those albums that you may dismay as being sub-par, or even bad first listen if you arn't into underground, but you soon relize how this album is a gem. DJ Premeir, and Guru have been putting out classic material sence the late 80's, with there first full album "No More Mr. Nice Guy". Premo is widely regaurded as one of the finest producers to ever grace the boards in hip hop history, and his partner in crime Guru is known as The King Of monotone Rap.
This is artistically a incredible peice of work. Guru & Premo put out a style of Rap that wasnt commen in the 90's, and is non-existant now! A Minimalistic Producer known for playing a melody of three keys, and a obsession for scratching teaming up with a monotone soft spoken slow tempo rapper. Sound like a weird combonation right? Wrong... If Being a Hip Hop duo was a marrige Gang Starr would have been couple of the year for 10 years straight. This is the type of album you have to spend some time listening to, sure I have my favorite songs of the batch, but they are all solid, and the way Premo mixed together the songs, and even transitions is strokes of genius. Sure you can listen to "Im the man" 5 times, but you will get the full effect of "Im The Man" in the way Gang Starr men't for you to hear it if you listen to the tracks leading to it. Everything seems timed perfectly. Strong in your face, phony rapper, and conspiracy theorys come in at the proper time for a full listen thru. The Interludes are also excellently timed. After hearing "Im The Man" you want something a little chill, & relax, so Premo follows it up with "92 Interlude" a soft short, but sweet 30 second paino riff. And even the intro is a great beat, than instead of it sounding like a new track they programmed it to go immediatly into the next track, cause the beats mix together. Guru lyrically is sharp, and he does not need much help, with only 2 guest appearences, and literally 2 guest appearences, sence premo controlls all the hook's with mastery Guru shows his lyrical powress, consistently spitting 30 plus bars in his monotone serious voice every track, except the interludes. In this album DJ premier seems to be the Architect, and Guru seems to be the foundation. Premier uses his mastery of beatmaking, programming, mixing, scatching, and especially sampling to construct a masterpeice around Guru's lyrics which are the foundation. Bottomline, you gotta pick this up if your a Hip Hop Head.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Must me consumed,
By Chris (St.Louis,MO) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Daily Operation (Audio CD)
Get you hands on this album if you ever have the chance to.Wow this is increddible Guru kills every track with some fat raps from 1992 and DJ Premier lays down some murder beats some of the best ever constructed on the history of wax.My Favorites were "The Place where we dwell","Flip a scrip","Don't take it Personal","2Deep","Conspiracy" and "The Illist Brother"
Lyrics-10/10 Production-10/10 X Factor-10/10 Classic-10 Replay10 Total=Perfect 10 out of 10 Fingers
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A classic,
By
This review is from: Daily Operation (Audio CD)
This is undeniably one of GangStarr's - and hip-hop's - classic albums. Guru and DJ Premier merge here to create a further evolution of the GangStarr sound. We find Primo in top form here, laying down track after track of jazzy, dusted beats. His influence on genres such as downtempo, acid jazz, and breakbeat aren't emphasized enough (so recognize!!) and can be seen plainly here. Some of my all-time favorites are here: "Take It Personal", "Soliloquy of Chaos", and "Ex Girl". Can't miss.
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Daily Operation by Gang Starr (Audio CD - 1992)
$11.98 $10.29
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