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Donuts
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4 ratings
Album Reviews: 0
Album: Donuts
Artist: Jay Dee
Release Date: 2/7/2006
Genre: Hip-Hop
Tags: hip-hop, funk
{^Donuts} was made on a hospital bed and in a home studio, on a stripped-down setup with a stack of vinyl. Released on its maker's 32nd birthday, three days before he passed away, the album has a resonance deeper than anyone could've hoped for or even imagined. Some who were close to {$Dilla} have said that there are hidden messages in the samples, the track titles, and who knows where else. It's impossible not to speculate about some things, like the track titled {&"Don't Cry,"} the looped "broken and blue" from a version of {&"Walk on By,"} the presence of {$Eddie Kendricks} singing "My people, hold on," or the fact that there are 31 tracks, a possible signal that {$Dilla} survived a little longer than he expected. Then again, for every possible message, there are two or three elements that could've been designed to throw any analysis off its trail. After all, if there's one single image that the disc brings to mind, it's that of {$Dilla} goofing off, having fun with some of his favorite records, and messing with some heads in the process. (And you could probably make the album's title out to be a metaphor for the circle of life, but sometimes a donut is just a donut.) Armed with sources that are either known to novice sample spotters or only the most seasoned diggers -- surprisingly, the former greatly outweighs the latter -- {$Dilla}'s also just as likely to leave his samples barely touched as he is to render them unrecognizable. It's fitting that {@Motown} echoes, a predominant theme, are often felt, from the use of {$Dionne Warwick}'s {$Holland-Dozier-Holland}-written {&"You're Gonna Need Me"} (on {&"Stop"}), to the shifting waves of percussion plucked from {$Kendricks}' {&"People… Hold On"} (on {&"People"}), to the {$Stevie}-like piano licks within {$Kool & the Gang}'s {&"The Fruitman"} ({&"The Diff'rence"}). Most of the tracks fall into the 60-90 second range. It's easy to be overwhelmed, or even put off, by the rapid-fire sequence, but it's astounding how so many of the sketches leave an immediate impression. By the third or fourth listen, what initially came across as a haphazard stream of slapped-together fragments begins to take the shape of a 44-minute suite filled with wistful joy. Like everything else {$Dilla} has ever done, {^Donuts} is not defining; in fact, elements of its approach bear the apparent influence of {$Jaylib} collaborator {$Madlib}. His mode has always been too slippery and restlessly progressive to be equated with any one track or album, but {^Donuts} just might be the one release that best reflects his personality. ~ Andy Kellman, All Music Guide

Track Name plays | downloads
Donuts (Outro) 0 0    
Workinonit 0 0    
Waves 0 0    
Light My Fire 0 0    
New 0 0    
Stop 0 0    
People 0 0    
Diff'rence 0 0    
Mash 0 0    
Time: The Donut of the Heart 0 0    
Glazed 0 0    
Airworks 0 0    
Lightworks 0 0    
Stepson of the Clapper 0 0    
Twister (Huh, What) 0 0    
One Eleven 0 0    
Two Can Win 0 0    
Don't Cry 0 0    
Anti-American Graffiti 0 0    
Geek Down 0 0    
Thunder 0 0    
Gobstopper 0 0    
One for Ghost 0 0    
Dilla Says Go 0 0    
Walkinonit 0 0    
Factory 0 0    
U-Love 0 0    
Hi. 0 0    
Bye. 0 0    
Last Donut of the Night 0 0    
Donuts (Intro) 0 0    

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