| | Black Moon Enta Da Stage CD Black Moon Discography of CDs
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Black Moon: 5 Ft. Excellerator, DJ Evil Dee, Buckshot Shorty. Smif-N-Wessun: Tek & Steele (background vocals). Additional personnel: Big Dru Ha, Everette "D.E.A." Lawson, Havoc, Mr. Walt, Lynn Blackwell (background vocals). Recorded at D & D, New York, New York. Personnel: Big Dru Ha, Havoc, Dea, Smif-N-Wessun (background vocals). Recording information: D&D, New York, NY. Photographer: Chicu Modu. Perhaps no other album of the '90s musically exhibits the shift in the hip-hop ethos that occurred in 1993 better than Black Moon's classic gemstone Enta da Stage. Listen to this album and you can hear hip-hop change. Prior to this, many of hip-hop's most confrontational vibes were presented as gifts from bellicose outfits like Public Enemy, Ice Cube, and other acts whose music raged. Enta da Stage features enough of that, but it also offered, perhaps even introduced, a brooding vibe. It was a pioneer sound. The group released "Who Got the Props" in the winter of 1992, about a year before the album dropped in November of 1993. It was a song in the same vein of Onyx's "Throw Ya Gunz," a hard track, with rough rhymes and a staple-NYC hook with a chorus of rowdy b-boys shouting in unison. The album featured similar tracks, from "Make Munne" to "Son Get Wrec" to "Buck Em Down" to the opener, "Powaful Impak!" -- all time-capsule tunes that embody early-'90s NYC hip-hop. The album begins like it was meant to be a Brooklyn version of Bacdafucup. But months prior to the album's release, Black Moon's second single, "How Many MC's...," hit the streets. It was a total departure from the vibe present on "Who Got da Props." DJ Evil Dee and da Beatminerz supplied a subtly horrific track over which Buckshot premiered a more deliberate flow that bespoke controlled menace. There is a story behind this transformation. Buckshot said he, Evil Dee, and the 5Ft Accelerator recorded half of the album -- the "Who Got da Props" half -- in 1992 before he went on tour with Kool G Rap and a young Nasty Nas. During a freestyle cipher, listening to Nas and Kool G Rap led Buckshot to an epiphany that motivated him to switch up his rhyme-style, and da Beatminerz tweaked their production to complement. The "How Many MC's..." half of the album -- songs like "I Gotcha Opin," "Slave," "Shit Iz Real" -- displayed Buckshot's new motif: a raspier tone, a more intricate flow and cadence, and a serious presence that was just as threatening as the temperamental MC on the earlier songs. The rowdy crew hooks gave way to what were more like stripped down musical breaks that often featured a jazz horn sample and nothing else. The production -- which should enter into any discussion of the greatest hip-hop production efforts of all time -- was every bit as radical as what the RZA introduced this same year or the Bomb Squad cooked up in the late '80s. The elements existed before, but never had they been synthesized into a hardcore East Coast outfit with the skill and artistry of Black Moon's Enta da Stage. The release of this album was overshadowed by the landmark Wu-Tang Clan debut and the popular success of Midnight Marauders and Doggystyle. But make no mistake, this is one of the '90s most important hip-hop classics, an album that deserves its own node on the hip-hop timeline. ~ Vincent Thomas This is the defining album of East Coast crime rap, which was largely established by the Brooklyn-based Boot Camp Clik of MCs. ENTA DA STAGE is a classic in its genre, featuring deep-in-the-crates beats by DJ Evil Dee (who continues to have a presence in New York's underground hip-hop scene), lurid street imagery delivered by MCs Buckshot and 5T and a flavor forever reminiscent of early-'90s New York. As much a social phenomenon as a congregation of MCs and DJs, the Boot Camp Clik spawned Smif-N-Wesson (who later changed their name to Cocoa Brovaz after the arms manufacturer commenced litigation), Heltah Skeltah and the Originoo Gunn Clappaz. ENTA DA STAGE contaVibe (11/93, p.112) - "...ENTA DA STAGE [has] undiluted street stories, delivered with such intensity that they almost sound confessional...Black Moon is definitely work-in-progress, though..." The Source (11/93, p.75) - 4 Stars - Slammin' - "...Black Moon's ENTA DA STAGE is a welcome return to the days when rap consistently reflected true musical and lyrical integrity....Make this jammie a priority..." Enta Da Stage Music | List Price | $15.98 (You save $2.99) | | Category | Rock/Pop Albums, R&B CDs, Rap, Urban Soundtrack, East Coast Rap | | Label | Wreck | | Orig Year | 1993 | | All Time Sales Rank | 3798  | | CD Universe Part number | 1037731 | | Catalog number | 2002 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Oct 18, 1993 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Producer | DJ Evil Dee; Mr. Walt | | Engineer | Leo "Swift" Morris | | Personnel | 5 Ft
Also: Havoc, Big Dru Ha, Everette "D.E.A." Lawson, Lynn Blackwell, Mr. Walt, Smif-N-Wessun |
Black Moon Enta Da Stage Songs Enta Da Stage Music Review Average Rating: (4.8 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews Music Ain't tha same........ we need more music like this......it has the grimy sound like basement studio sound......real boom bap....da beatminerz got real street sh**, everyone wants to be sonically inclined now! Submitted by a reviewer (Hartford, Cunnuck, USA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 1 found this helpful.
ENTA DA CLASSIC TRULY BROUGHT HIP HOP BACK TO THE EAST COAST, AWAY FROM THEM DOGG POUND PUSSIES! DENSE BEATS AND JAZZY LOOPS MADE THIS A MASTERPEICE, WHO GOT DA PROPS? BLACK MOON DO FOR THIS GEM! Submitted by vikandtim (gloucester, england) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
ya'boy Classic album hands down,blackmoon did they thing for real. If you haven't heard this album buy it and get a taste of hiphop history. Submitted by chi_cite (chicago) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Not for the radio listener True head material. Classic underground. Nothing radio friendly on this one, undiluted "real" hiphop for the educated listener. Submitted by dv8dv8dv8 (Australia) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Black Moon - Enta Da Stage HIP-HOP CLASSIC! This album is tight from start to finish, the beats and the lyrics are off the hook. Peace! Submitted by PMG (Salem, NH, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Purchase Enta Da Stage CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Organized Konfusion Stress: The Extinction Agenda CD (1994)
Enta Da Stage
$8.49 Additional personnel: Q-Tip, O.C. The Large Professor (vocals); D-Ave (scratches). Producers: Buckwild, Organized Konfusion, Rockwilder. Engineers: Antonio Smalios, D. Anthony "The Bomb" Johnson, Anton Puchshansky. Recorded at Unique Studios and Battery, New York, New York; Power Play Studios, Long Island City, New York. Samples include "Mingus Fingus No. 2" (as performed by Charles Mingus), "Rain Dance" (as performed by Herbie Hancock), "Melody For Thelma" (as performed by Blue Mitchell) and "Who Sey Me Dun" (as performed by Cutty Ranks). Recording information: Battery, New York, NY; Power Play Studios, Long Island City, NY; Unique ...
| | Smif-N-Wessun Dah Shinin' CD (1995)
Enta Da Stage
$12.79 Smif-N-Wessun: Tek, Steele (vocals). Recorded at D&D Studio, New York. Audio Mixer: Smif-N-Wessun. Recording information: D & D Studio. Upon its release in 1995, Smif-n-Wessun's Dah Shinin' was unfortunately swept aside by the popular onslaught of the Notorious B.I.G. and the Wu-Tang Clan. That's too bad, because the group's album is a masterpiece of New York City crime rap. The stars of the album aren't really the two MCs, Tek and Steele, but the Beatminerz production team. They were responsible for the groundbreaking tracks on Black Moon's Enta da Stage, the album on which Smif-n-Wessun made their debut, and they continue their strong track record on Dah Shinin'. Da Beatminerz craft their songs with deep, fluid basslines and moody jazz samples. On Smif-n-Wessun's ...
| | Diamond Stunts, Blunts And Hip Hop CD (1992)
Enta Da Stage
$7.49 Full performer name: Diamond & The Psychotic Neurotics. Personnel: Dave Ogrin (horns, programming); Shane "The Doctor" Faber (keyboards, programming); Fat Joe, Whiz One, Gigi from Lincoln Projects, The Kids of Forrest Day Care Center (class of '92), Bonita, LaReese, The Psychos, Michelle Sweeting, Jasmine, Maestro, Mike G.Q., Fat Joe, Brand Nubian. Producers include: Diamond, DJ Mark The 45 King, Showbiz, Lakim Shabazz, Jazzy Jay. Recorded at Jazzy Jay's Recording Studio, Bronx, New York and Calliope Studios, New York, New York. Includes liner notes by Leslie Ann Drye. Diamond D had quietly provided some exciting production work and made strides within the ...
| | Heltah Skeltah Nocturnal CD (1996)
Enta Da Stage
$11.69 Heltah Skeltah: Da Rockness Monsta (rap vocals, bass); Tawl Sean aka Ruck (rap vocals). Additional personnel: O.G.C., Illa Noyz, The Representativz, Da Rockness Monstas (rap vocals); Tony "Books" Avilez (guitar); Tone Da Backbone (bass); Vinia Mojica (background vocals). Producers: Buckshot, Lord Jamar (track 1); Baby Paul (tracks 2-3, 7, 13); Buckshot (track 4); Shaleek (tracks 5, 15); DJ Evil D (track 6); Sean J Period (track 8); Baby Paul, Rock The Bucktown Bulli (track 9); Supreme (track 10); Mr. Walt (tracks 11, 14); Dr. Kill Patient (track 12); E-Swift (track 16). Engineers: John Wydrycs (tracks 1, 4, 8, 10); DJ Akshun (track 2); Andy Cardinas (track 3); Kieren Walsh, John Wydrycs (tracks 5-6, 15-16); Kieren Walsh, Ken Duro Ifill ...
| | Jeru The Damaja Sun Rises In The East CD (1994)
Enta Da Stage
$9.79 Personnel includes: Jeru The Damaja (rap). Recorded at D&D Recording Studio, New York, New York. DJ Premier's first album-length production outside of Gang Starr was his best by far. Where Premier's productions hadn't shone underneath the cracking, over-earnest vocals of Guru, with a superior stylist like Jeru these tracks became brilliant musical investigations with odd hooks (often detuned bells, keys, or vibes), perfectly scratched upchoruses, and the grittiest, funkiest Brooklynese beats pounding away in the background. Of course, the star of the show was Jeru, a cocksure young rapper who brought the dozens from the streets to a metaphysical battleground where he did battle with all manner of foe ...
| | Black Moon Diggin' In Dah Vaults CD (1996)
Enta Da Stage
$13.29 DIGGIN' IN DAH VAULTS features remixed tracks from Black Moon's 1993 album ENTA DA STAGE along with 2 previously-unreleased tracks. Black Moon: Buckshot, 5Ft Accelerator (vocals); DJ Evil Dee (DJ). Da Beatminerz: DJ Evil Dee, Mr. Walt. Additional personnel includes: Tek & Steele, Havoc (background vocals). Engineers include: Leo "Swift" Morris, Kieran Walsh. Recorded at D&D Studios, New York, New York. Personnel: Big Dru Ha, Havoc, Dea, Mr. Walt, Smif-N-Wessun (background vocals). Audio Mixer: Da Beatminerz. Recording information: D&D Studios, New York, NY. Photographer: Chicu Modu. With its first single, "Who Got the Props," Black Moon ...
| | Who Is Jill Scott? Words & Sounds Vol. 1 CD (2000)
Enta Da Stage
$11.05 Words And Sound
Personnel: Jill Scott (vocals); Larry Gold (conductor, cello); Scratch (vocals, turntables); Black Thought (vocals); Eric Seals (acoustic guitar); Chris Odum, Jeff Lee Johnson (guitar); Igor Szwec, Emma Kummrow, Gregory Teperman, Charles Parker (violin); Davis Barnett, Peter Nocello (viola); Jafar Barron (trumpet); Jeff Bradshaw (trombone); Ted Thomas Jr. (keyboards, bass, drums, percussion); Keith Pelzer (keyboards, synthesizer); Andre Harris (keyboards, drums); Patrick Sean McClain, James Poyser, Pete Kuzma, Kamal (keyboards); Hub, Don Stevens, Jeff "DJ Jazzy Jeff" Townes (bass); Quest Love, Vidal Davis (drums); Garth Trinidad, Eric Roberson, Gene Roberson, Stephanie Renee McNeil, Taalid Johnson (background vocals). Producers: Darren Henson, Andre Harris, Jeff Townes, Vidal Davis, Keith Pelzer. Engineers: Vidal Davis, Keith Pelzer, Jeff Townes. Recorded at The Studio and A Touch Of Jazz Studios, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Includes liner notes by Steve McKeever. WHO IS JILL SCOTT? WORDS AND SOUNDS VOL. 1 was nominated for the 2001 Grammy Award for Best R&B Album, Jill Scott was nominated for Best New Artist and "Gettin' In The Way" was nominated for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance. "A Long Walk" was nominated for the 2002 Grammy Award for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance. Though start-up label Hidden Beach and its manufacturer/distributor Sony may have been hoping for another Lauryn Hill in this eloquent young African-American from a Middle Atlantic state, Jill Scott turns out to be something of a hip-hop Patti Smith, a street poet who, on her first album, hasn't quite made the transition from spoken word performances to music, despite an excellent singing voice. With any luck, she will retain her sense of the power of words, since ...
| | Dephazz Detunized Gravity CD (2001) Import; + Bonus CD
Enta Da Stage
$36.69
| | DJ Squeeky Dogging Da Game CD (2003)
Enta Da Stage
$14.49
| | Los Chalchaleros En La Noche CD (2004) (Import) Argentina
Enta Da Stage
$11.79
| | Stars Du Buena Vista Legende De La Musique Cu CD (Import)
Enta Da Stage
$35.49
| | I Musici Kanon & Gigue CD (2007) (Import)
Enta Da Stage
$13.15
| | Levenson New Frontier CD (2007)
Enta Da Stage
$18.99
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