Live and Let Die (album)

For the soundtrack album from the James Bond film, see Live and Let Die (soundtrack).
Live and Let Die
Studio album by Kool G Rap & DJ Polo
Released November 24, 1992
Recorded 199192
Cherokee Recording Studio, Westlake Audio, Paramount Studio - (Los Angeles California)
Genre East Coast hip hop, gangsta rap, mafioso rap, horrorcore, Hardcore Hip hop
Length 61:45
Label Cold Chillin' Records
CC 5001
Producer Sir Jinx, Kool G Rap, Trackmasters
Kool G Rap & DJ Polo chronology
Wanted: Dead or Alive
(1990)
Live and Let Die
(1992)
4,5,6
(1995)
(Kool G Rap)
Singles from Live and Let Die
  1. "Ill Street Blues"
    Released: February 26, 1993 (commercial release)
  2. "On the Run"
    Released: May 24, 1993

Live and Let Die is the third and final studio album by the American hip hop duo Kool G Rap & DJ Polo, which was released November 24, 1992, on Cold Chillin'. The album features guest appearances from Ice Cube, Big Daddy Kane, Scarface, and Bushwick Bill. The singles "Ill Street Blues" and "On the Run" both received consistent airplay on Yo! MTV Raps, and BET's Rap City upon the album's release.

Warner Bros. Records eventually refused to distribute Live and Let Die as part of its deal with Cold Chillin' Records because of the album's lyrical content and cover art.[1] It is not known if a Warner Bros. catalogue number was ever assigned to the release. Live and Let Die remained out of print until it was re-released and remastered with various bonus material in August 2008 by Traffic Entertainment Group, the current owners of the Cold Chillin' catalog. Over the years, several music critics have hailed it as an underground classic, due to Kool G Rap's intricate lyricism, and Sir Jinx's production.

Compared to the lyrical themes on the duo's previous albums, this album features an even greater focus on hardcore gangsta and mafioso rap lyrics. The violence and sexual content are much more graphic than on any previous Kool G Rap & DJ Polo album. Most of the songs feature vivid stories of some sort, many of them related to organized crime (especially the singles "On the Run" and "Ill Street Blues") and violent street crime ("Train Robbery", "Two to the Head"). There are also sex raps ("Operation CB", "Fuck U Man"), horrorcore stories ("Straight Jacket", "Edge of Sanity"), and even some socio-political commentary similar to Public Enemy and Boogie Down Productions ("Crime Pays"). The songs "Home Sweet Home", "Fuck U Man", and "Still Wanted Dead or Alive" act as sequels, respectively, to the songs "Streets of New York", "Talk Like Sex", and "Wanted: Dead or Alive" from the previous album.

Conception

Background

After the release of Wanted: Dead or Alive tensions arouse between Kool G Rap and Eric B. who produced and mixed most of the songs on the album. Rather than using the same formula that he used on his two previous albums, Kool G Rap decided to give Live and Let Die a cinematic feel with each song telling a different story and providing backdrops for the respective scenes. He recruited several non-East Coast artists to assist him on the album, such as West Coast emcee Ice Cube and his cohort, producer Sir Jinx, and Southern emcees such as Scarface and Bushwick Bill (from the Geto Boys). Although the album was originally intended to be released in 1991; its original release encountered several dilemmas due to record label issues, and the album's controversial content. Cold Chillin' Records, which was Kool G Rap and DJ Polo's main record label, was caught up in a legal battle with fellow Cold Chillin' artist Biz Markie over sampling rights, and Warner Bros. Records, which was its distributor, was involved in the Ice-T "Cop Killer" controversy. Due to Live and Let Die's cover art and song content, both labels were reluctant to give the album a release, as they didn't want to get themselves into any more legal troubles.[2] While the project was on hold, Kool G Rap spent almost one year re-writing and recording until the LP was finally released in late 1992.[1]

Recording

The recording and writing process began in 1991 in Los Angeles California, and continued into 1992.[1] The album is considered by many to be the East coast AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted, being that it takes the same approach that Ice Cube took with writing, recording, and collaborating with, and in a coast that he didn't reside; (AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted was recorded in New York, and features several non-West coast artists, namely Public Enemy and its production team the Bomb Squad, while Ice Cube was a California citizen—Live and Let Die was recorded in California and features several non-East coast artists, while Kool G Rap was a New York citizen).

Cover art

The original cover was to display Kool G Rap and DJ Polo robbing a bank, with the photo being in black and white through a surveillance camera's perspective. This concept was eventually dismissed, as every bank that they went to would not allow them to take such a graphic photo in their buildings.[2] The second option was to have a photo of Kool G Rap and DJ Polo hopping inside a van with sacks of money and guns. Although this idea was more promising, being that this photo would cost less, and they could easily do it inside a photo studio, there was a new policy that record labels were taking at that time, which didn't allow weapons on album covers.[2] The third and final option was thought of by photographer George Dubose.[3] The cover depicts Kool G Rap and DJ Polo in a warehouse dangling raw meat in front of a pair of rottweilers, whose leashes are tied to the legs of a pair of chairs, on top of which are two TNT's (Tactical Narcotics Taskforce agents) in nooses. It insinuates that as Kool G Rap and DJ Polo tease the dogs with the food, they run, pulling out the chairs and strangling the two under covers. The album was eventually shelved because of this, and remained out of print until it was re-released in August 2008.

Reception

Critical response

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[4]
Billboard(Favorable)[5]
Robert Christgau[6]
Rolling Stone[7]
The Source[8]
Trouser Press(Favorable)[9]

Although Live and Let Die didn't receive the same amount of commercial success, and attention as some of Kool G Rap's other releases, it is widely favored among fans and critics alike. Andy Kellman of Allmusic gave the album 4 ½ out of 5 stars, and stated; "A strong case could be made for Live and Let Die as Kool G Rap & DJ Polo's crowning achievement." He also went on to say that "The album is one story after another that draws you in without fail, and they come at you from several angles. Whether pulling off a train heist, venting sexual frustration, analyzing his psychosis, or lording over the streets, G Rap is a pro at holding a captive audience. All die-hard East Coast rap fans, especially followers of the Notorious B.I.G., owe it to themselves to get real familiar with this album." Jeff Chang from Trouser press gave the album a favorable review and complimented the chemistry between Kool G Rap and producer Sir Jinx, as well as the album's overall lyricism and production.

Track listing

# Title: Live and Let Die Time
1 "Intro" 0:41
2 "On the Run" 4:40
3 "Live and Let Die" 5:16
4 "Crime Pays" 2:17
5 "Home Sweet Home" 2:37
6 "Train Robbery" 4:12
7 "# 1 with a Bullet" (feat. Big Daddy Kane) 2:36
8 "Operation CB" 4:28
9 "Straight Jacket" 3:11
10 "Ill Street Blues" 3:46
11 "Go For Your Guns" 4:37
12 "Letters" 3:40
13 "Nuff Said" 2:47
14 "Edge of Sanity" 5:12
15 "Fuck U Man" 4:01
16 "Still Wanted Dead or Alive" 3:24
17 "Two to the Head" (feat. Scarface, Bushwick Bill, Ice Cube) 4:46

Personnel

Chart positions

Album

Chart (1992) Peak
position
Billboard 200 185
Top R&B/Hip Hop Albums 18
Top Heatseekers 6

Singles

Year Song Chart positions
Hot Rap Singles Hot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles Sales
1993 "On the Run" 19 30
"Ill Street Blues" 26

References

  1. 1 2 3 Code of Silence: Kool G Rap interview in The Source by Reginald C. Dennis, January 1993.
  2. 1 2 3 Kool G Rap, with Will C., 2008, Live and Let Die Remaster Liner Notes, p. 2.
  3. Kool G Rap, with George DuBose, 2008, "I Speak Music...Hip Hop, p. -.
  4. Kellman, Andy. Review: Live and Let Die. Allmusic. Retrieved on 2010-01-31.
  5. Columnist. Review: Live and Let Die. Billboard: 24. November 1992.
  6. Christgau, Robert. Review: Live and Let Die. Robert Christgau. Retrieved on 2010-01-31.
  7. Hoard, Christian. Review: Live and Let Die. Rolling Stone Album Guide (2004). P: 465.
  8. Columnist. Review: Live and Let Die. The Source: 56. February 1993.
  9. Chang, Jeff. Review: Live and Let Die. Trouser Press. Retrieved on 2010-01-31.
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