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Various - Top Shelf 8/8/88 Album

Various - Top Shelf 8/8/88 Album
Performer: Various
Title: Top Shelf 8/8/88
Country: Japan
Released: 15 Jul 2007
Catalog number: LEX CD 07005
Label: Lexington
MP3 album szie: 2066 mb
FLAC album size: 1121 mb

Tracklist

1Master AceRevolution's 'Bout To Start
2Grand PubaLet's Go
3Melle Mel & Grandmaster CazThe Battle Is On
4Fab 5 FreddyIntro
5Doug E. FreshIt Ain't Nothin
6Biz MarkieMy Name Is...
7Jungle BrothersBack In The Jungle
8Big Daddy KaneLike That, Y'all
9Craig GCatch A Lyrical Beatdown
10Special EdThis Mic
11MC LyteListen Up
12Just IceI Run The Streets
13Smooth BI Want My Money Back
14Black SheepI'm The One
15Chubb RockChubb Rocks The Party

Notes

Released in a 6-panels Digipak.
Price printed on obi: 2,415JPY(incl.tax)

Classics undiscovered gems from the golden era of hip hop recorded at Top Shelf Studios, NY but then lost.

Barcodes

  • Barcode: 4 560230 520298

Short intro

Посмотреть сведения об участниках альбома, рецензии, композиции и приобрести альбом 2007 CD от Top Shelf 8888 на 2018 13 Songs. Top Shelf 1988. Various Artists. Old School Rap , in August, an album called Top Shelf 8888 was issued in Japan. Supposedly a collection of never-before-released recordings from 1988, it came with a back story that was even more elaborate than the rumors. And as the music spread on the Internet, skeptics set blogs ablaze: was it a hoax The albums liner notes told this story: An unidentified New York hip-hop aficionado scavenging through a storage locker near Hoboken, N. discovered a box of studio reels. The only clue to their contents was a name scribbled on a label: Fab Five Freddy, the hip-hop impresario who was host of Yo. Top Shelf 8888 Tracklist. Like That Y'all Lyrics. About Top Shelf 8888. Top Shelf 8888 Q&A. Writers Big Daddy Kane. More Big Daddy Kane albums. Veteranz Day. Daddys Home. Show all albums by Big Daddy Kane. Discover all of this album's music connections, watch videos, listen to music, discuss and download. Top Shelf 8888 2007. Album by Chubb Rock. Chubb Rocks the Party. Raw by Big Daddy Kane 1987. Change the Beat Female Version by Beside 1982. Top Shelf 8888 original version1. Fab 5 Freddy - Intro2. Black Sheep - I'm The One3. Big Daddy Kane - Like That Yall4. A Latin trap pioneer drops his sprawling sophomore album, two of rap's finest at the height of their powers, and more. Producer TM88s Guide to Creating Through a Pandemic. Introducing Ravecation, a Virtual Electronic Music Experience. A digital party, every Wednesday night. Top Shelf 8888. Release set as Album as all recordings are unique and original to this release at the time of release anyway. Also the title is correct as listed. Annotation last modified on 2007-09-01 08:21 UTC. Graig G - catch a lyrical beatdown - Album Various - Top Shelf 8888 2007. Stream Tracks and Playlists from Top Shelf 1988 on your desktop or mobile to music from Top Shelf 1988 like Biz Markie and Doug E. Find the latest tracks, albums, and images from Top Shelf 1988. Play album. Popular this week. Biz Markie. 3 listeners. Do you have any photos of this artist Add an image
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Reviews: (11)
Yozshujind
Yozshujind
Let’s get a vinyl release of this rad compilation. Top shelf ‘88!
Weernis
Weernis
Sure, It Sounds Old School, but When Were They in Class?By Hua Hsu, New York Times, Sept. 15, 2007 The rumors swirled all summer: a hip-hop El Dorado, a treasure trove of lost recordings by old-school greats like Big Daddy Kane and Biz Markie, had been discovered in an abandoned storage locker in New Jersey.Then, in August, an album called “Top Shelf 8/8/88” was issued in Japan. Supposedly a collection of never-before-released recordings from 1988, it came with a back story that was even more elaborate than the rumors. And as the music spread on the Internet, skeptics set blogs ablaze: was it a hoax?The album’s liner notes told this story: An unidentified New York hip-hop aficionado scavenging through a storage locker near Hoboken, N.J., discovered a box of studio reels. The only clue to their contents was a name scribbled on a label: “Fab Five Freddy,” the hip-hop impresario who was host of “Yo! MTV Raps” in the 1980s.According to the story, the reels turned out to be recordings from hip-hop’s fabled golden era, taped at a studio called Top Shelf in a basement in the East Village of Manhattan. The reels were supposedly lost during the Tompkins Square Park riots of 1988, and the studio later shut down.Built on loops of classic soul songs and with rap that is at least four times faster than what is usually heard on the radio today, “Top Shelf” is peppered with references to Michael Dukakis, the Pontiac Fiero and the first “Die Hard” film. But why, as fans wrote online, do some of the supposedly teenage rappers sound hoarse and winded? And how come nobody has stepped forward and claimed to be one of the “anonymous Top Shelf producers” credited with the album’s excellent productions? “I wasn’t expecting all this Internet action to take place,” said Benjy Grinberg, the owner of Rostrum Records, the Pittsburgh label that will release “Top Shelf” this fall. He said the story was true, adding: “I love reading these hip-hop heads go back and forth and pick apart the lyrics. To be honest, I like the doubts.”The “Top Shelf” dispute is the third major controversy over rediscovered hip-hop recordings this year. Paul Winley Records in Harlem issued two discs said to feature routines from Afrika Bambaataa’s late-1970s performances. They are billed as sequels to Mr. Bambaataa’s famous “Death Mix” album, but as many listeners have pointed out, the style of performance and the quality of selections do not seem to match those of their predecessor.Also this year, a British label called Golden Reaal issued “Live Convention 77-79,” supposedly a prequel to two rare early-1980s rap compilations. While some dispute the recording’s authenticity, it has been nearly impossible to debunk the elaborate back story. Golden Reaal has said that the rediscovered mixes were lost to a robbery in the early 1980s but recovered in 2004 from — sound familiar? — an abandoned storage facility in New Jersey.The interest in these obscure recordings, which aren’t going to make anybody rich, surpasses mere nostalgia. They suggest a yearning for the craft and ethics of a bygone era, before hip-hop became big business.A Wikipedia entry for Top Shelf Recording Studio has been listed since May 2005. But the entry does not list a street address for Top Shelf, and Fab Five Freddy, the executive producer of the album, won’t reveal it. In an interview conducted via e-mail messages, he said that it was in Alphabet City near Tompkins Square Park and belonged to an old friend who was an audio engineer and a marijuana dealer. “Because of the nature of his business, even though it was a long time ago, I don’t want to put it on blast like that,” Fab Five Freddy wrote.But several hip-hop producers who were active in 1988 said they had never heard of Top Shelf. The producer Howie Tee has worked with Chubb Rock and Special Ed, two artists on “Top Shelf,” but he does not recall their mentioning the studio. Dante Ross, a rap producer who grew up on the Lower East Side, also said he did not recall the name. Given that the story is set during a period better known for great music than for reliable bookkeeping, and that many of the era’s stars say they barely remember what they did 19 years ago, the truth is hard to ferret out. Grandmaster Caz appears with Melle Mel on a song called “The Battle is On,” and although Top Shelf is mentioned in the lyrics, Grandmaster Caz has no recollection of when or where it was recorded. The year 1988 “was kind of a blur for me,” he said. Brian Coleman, author of “Check the Technique,” an oral history of hip-hop, said: “People who really know the deal from back then could poke holes in this fairly easily. But that would be a misguided thing to do. People should be celebrating the fact that someone did this.”Mr. Ross agreed. “If it’s a hoax, it’s kind of funny,” he said. “I think it’s funny when people create something mythical, if it’s done tongue in cheek. It sounds to me like a hustle.”Dres, a member of the group Black Sheep, appreciates the exposure he has received from his track on “Top Shelf,” “I’m the One.” When asked how he became involved with the project, he said that Mr. Grinberg gave him a track and asked him to participate.“I put a lot of energy into it, and reminiscing about back in the day,” he said. So it is a hoax? Yes, he said. “At the end of the day, anybody really listening to it — you know, it ain’t that hard to tell,” he said.Afrika Baby Bam of the Jungle Brothers, who contributed the track “Back in the Jungle,” which he said was recorded in 2003, dismissed concerns about the authenticity of the project. “We still remember the culture and tradition,” he said. “How much more do you need, outside of the actual date, to make a record as authentic as you would have made on Aug. 8, 1988?”When asked to comment on these debunkings, Mr. Grinberg speculated that some of the artists might have gotten confused during the “re-production of the songs,” which he said involved cleaning up the old tracks. He added that he was “not out to convince anyone of anything,” and suggested that the album’s ultimate aim was to correct the misdeeds done to these oft-forgotten artists who “didn’t get the same amount of money or accolades that rappers today get.”Fab Five Freddy was vague. “The real story is the music,” he wrote.When the album is released in the United States, Mr. Grinberg may have some bigger headaches than skeptical bloggers. Special Ed said that he had no idea how his song “This Mic” found its way onto “Top Shelf,” and that the track was a sped-up version of a song that he recorded in the late 1990s.“I never heard of Top Shelf Studios,” he said. “This is news to me.”
Bys
Bys
Now it gets even more confusing with the release of Top Shelf 88 in 2018, some of the tracks have different beats, for example the Special Ed one is not the same beat but has the same lines.
Nargas
Nargas
Yeah, it's a fake. No way Biz Markie was rhyming like THAT at age 19. Solid compilation, though....
Trash Obsession
Trash Obsession
The Biz Markie was 24 years old in 1988.
Xar
Xar
They discussed this on Shante's Have a Nice Day show. This was recorded recently but with a 1988 feel.
Mr.jeka
Mr.jeka
none of the artists even remember a Top Shelf Studios - now if these were 1212 / Power Play or somewhere maybe we'd check fo rit. but the name Top Shelf isn't on a single NYC 12" I've ever seen...
Modigas
Modigas
'88 is not means the year of the recorded. It's a year of the Tompkins Square riots happened and Top Shelf Studio had been caught up in that riots....
BlessСhild
BlessСhild
I don't think this was actually recorded in '88 either but I'd still LOVE a couple copies of that Special Ed joint on 12s.
Fani
Fani
I think the 1988 means a year of the studio looted during the Tompkins Square Park riots, Not the recorded year.
Rindyt
Rindyt
No way this is authentic!!!