Live from the Styleetron

Live from the Styleetron
Studio album by Raw Fusion
Released November 12, 1991
Genre West Coast Hip Hop, Gangsta rap
Length 70:47
Label Hollywood BASIC
Producer Money-B, DJ FUZE
Raw Fusion chronology
Live from the Styleetron
(1991)
Hoochiefied Funk
(1994)
Singles from Live from the Styleetron
  1. "Rockin' to the PM"
  2. "Throw Your Hands in the Air"
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]

Live from the Styleetron is the debut studio album by Oakland-based hip hop group Raw Fusion. The group was fronted by Ron Brooks, known as Money-B, an active member of Digital Underground who produced this album as a side project with fellow group member David Elliot known as DJ FUZE. Among many featured artists was a young unknown performer named Tupac Shakur who would later become a legendary figure in the world of hip hop.

Album Review

The Raw Fusion album was vastly different from the Digital Underground style that relied upon samples from the 1970s P-Funk sound. Critic Alex Henderson noted that Raw Fusion's first album had more in common with the jazzy sounds of groups like A Tribe Called Quest and De La Soul.[1] Typical of Digital Underground members, the composition of lyrics employed a great deal of humor including making light of armed robbery and, in at least three tracks, the Jheri curl hairstyle popular in the 1980s.

One of the few serious tracks on this album is "Wild Francis," a political statement made through the tale of a woman who is killed by police after becoming a Marxist revolutionary figure.[1]

Featured artists included eight members of Digital Underground as well as guests Another Ninja, Cooley Ranks, Daddy Courtney, Jessica Jones, Mac-Mone, Margie Marie Rubio, Ronville, Sean, Styleetron, and Pam Taylor.[2] The album peaked at number 32 on the Billboard Heatseekers charts which highlights new and developing musical acts. The single "Throw Your Hands In The Air" became a minor radio hit in the San Francisco metro area with a music video that was the first major production for notable Hollywood producers the Hughes Brothers.

Humpty Hump and Digital Underground

Gregory Jacobs, known by his stage name Humpty Hump among others, was the lead vocalist for Digital Underground who also appeared as a guest artist on Live from the Styleetron. This particular stage persona of Jacobs was the fuel behind "The Humpty Dance" that peaked at number 11 on the Billboard charts in 1990 and first brought widespread fame to the group. Money-B, new to Digital Underground, provided vocals in The Humpty Dance and three other tracks on the album Sex Packets and co-wrote "Freaks of the Industry" with Jacobs while DJ FUZE participated in two tracks.[3] Jacobs, in turn, appeared in "Funkintoyoear" on Raw Fusion's album appearing as both Shock G and Humpty Hump.

2Pac

Tupac Shakur, a roadie and backup dancer for Digital Underground, appeared as a guest artist on the album,[2] the unknown rapper later becoming a hip hop legend. Shakur's debut as an emcee had come only nine months prior to this Raw Fusion release, the 19-year-old appearing in the Digital Underground track "Same Song" with Dan Aykroyd released on the motion picture soundtrack Nothing but Trouble in February 1991. In October of 1991, one month prior to Raw Fusion's debut, Shakur again appeared with Digital Underground featured in a single track on the album Sons of the P.

The track "#1 with a Bullet" on Live from the Styleetron was only Shakur's third appearance as a rapper. Raw Fusion frontman Money-B stated in an interview that Shakur, at that time, was not a great rapper but was always able to grab the attention of everyone in the room, noting his tremendous work ethic, passion, and drive.[4] Interestingly Shakur released his first solo album 2Pacalypse Now with Interscope Records on November 12, 1991, exactly the same Tuesday that Live from the Styleetron was released.

Steve Counter served as sound engineer on both 2Pacalypse Now and Live from the Styleetron as well as nine En Vogue albums during his career.[5] Another credited sound engineer Darrin Harris worked with many acts including Ghostface Killah, Tony! Toni! Toné!, and the Bee Gees.[6] Perhaps the most notable sound engineer was Matt Kelly who has worked with the likes of Johnny Cash, Joe Satriani, and Little Jimmy Dickens throughout a career that began in 1958.[7]

Within two years of Raw Fusion's debut, Shakur would be a well known recording artist and in less than five years he would be tragically murdered in Las Vegas. Shakur and Money-B both appeared in an alleged sex tape[8] filmed at a 1991 house party discovered by the media in early October 2011.[9]

Track listing

# Title Length Featured Artists Sample(s)
1 "Live from the Styleetron" 3:03 Margie Marie Rubio
2 "Hip Hip/Stylee Expression" 4:09
3 "Don't Test" 5:30 Pam Taylor, Daddy Courtney
4 "Do My Thang" 6:08
5 "Ah Nah Go Drip" 6:34 Mac-Mone, Cooley Ranks, Clee
6 "Nappy Headed Ninja" 4:31
7 "Kill Mi Dead" 5:00 Mac-Mone
8 "Rockin' to the P.M." 7:02 Roniece Levias, Piano-Man
9 "Hang Time" 4:59
10 "Traffic Jam" 5:21 Roniece Levias, Mac-Mone
11 "Funkintoyoear" 4:43 Shock G, Big Money Odis, Pee Wee, Humpty Hump, Schmoovy-Schmoov
12 "Wild Francis" 5:50 Roniece Levias, Mac-Mone
13 "Throw Your Hands In The Air" 4:31 Mac-Mone, Piano-Man
14 "#1 with a Bullet" 3:39 2Pac

Billboard Charts

Year Album details Chart positions
US Heatseekers
[10]
1991 Live from the Styleetron
  • Released: November 12, 1991
  • Label: Hollywood BASIC
32

Credits

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Live from the Styleetron - Raw Fusion". AllMusic. All Media Network. Retrieved June 10, 2013.
  2. 1 2 "Live from the Styleetron - Raw Fusion - Credits". AllMusic. All Media Network. Retrieved June 10, 2013.
  3. "Sex Packets credits". discogs. Retrieved June 10, 2013.
  4. "Money B & Chopmaster J Remember Tupac On What Would Have Been Shakur's 40th Birthday". Amoeba music. Retrieved 2013-06-10.
  5. "Steve Counter Biography". AllMusic. All Media Network. Retrieved June 10, 2013.
  6. "Darrin Harris Biography". AllMusic. All Media Network. Retrieved June 10, 2013.
  7. "Matt Kelly Biography". AllMusic. All Media Network. Retrieved June 10, 2013.
  8. Mancini, Elan (October 10, 2011). "Money B Speaks on Alleged Tupac Sex Tape". XXL. Townsquare Media. Retrieved June 10, 2013.
  9. Minichino, Nick (October 3, 2011). "1991 Tupac Groupie Sex Tape (With Money-B Cameo) Reportedly Surfaces". VH1. Archived from the original on September 6, 2014. Retrieved June 10, 2013.
  10. "allmusic ((( Live from the Styleetron > Charts & Awards > Billboard Albums)))". AllMusic. All Media Network. Retrieved June 10, 2013.

External links

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