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Beastie Boys|Licensed To Ill

Licensed To Ill

Beastie Boys

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Perhaps Licensed to Ill was inevitable -- a white group blending rock and rap, giving them the first number one album in hip-hop history. But that reading of the album's history gives short shrift to the Beastie Boys; producer Rick Rubin, and his label, Def Jam, and this remarkable record, since mixing metal and hip-hop isn't necessarily an easy thing to do. Just sampling and scratching Sabbath and Zeppelin to hip-hop beats does not make for an automatically good record, though there is a visceral thrill to hearing those muscular riffs put into overdrive with scratching. But, much of that is due to the producing skills of Rick Rubin, a metalhead who formed Def Jam Records with Russell Simmons and had previously flirted with this sound on Run-D.M.C.'s Raising Hell, not to mention a few singles and one-offs with the Beasties prior to this record. He made rap rock, but to give him lone credit for Licensed to Ill (as some have) is misleading, since that very same combination would not have been as powerful, nor would it have aged so well -- aged into a rock classic -- if it weren't for the Beastie Boys, who fuel this record through their passion for subcultures, pop culture, jokes, and the intoxicating power of wordplay. At the time, it wasn't immediately apparent that their obnoxious patter was part of a persona (a fate that would later plague Eminem), but the years have clarified that this was a joke -- although, listening to the cajoling rhymes, filled with clear parodies and absurdities, it's hard to imagine the offense that some took at the time. Which, naturally, is the credit of not just the music -- they don't call it the devil's music for nothing -- but the wild imagination of the Beasties, whose rhymes sear into consciousness through their gonzo humor and gleeful delivery. There hasn't been a funnier, more infectious record in pop music than this, and it's not because the group is mocking rappers (in all honesty, the truly twisted barbs are hurled at frat boys and lager lads), but because they've already created their own universe and points of reference, where it's as funny to spit out absurdist rhymes and pound out "Fight for Your Right (To Party)" as it is to send up street corner doo wop with "Girls." Then, there is the overpowering loudness of the record -- operating from the axis of where metal, punk, and rap meet, there never has been a record this heavy and nimble, drunk on its own power yet giddy with what they're getting away with. There is a sense of genuine discovery, of creating new music, that remains years later, after countless plays, countless misinterpretations, countless rip-off acts, even countless apologies from the Beasties, who seemed guilty by how intoxicating the sound of it is, how it makes beer-soaked hedonism sound like the apogee of human experience. And maybe it is, maybe it isn't, but in either case, Licensed to Ill reigns tall among the greatest records of its time.

© Stephen Thomas Erlewine /TiVo

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Licensed To Ill

Beastie Boys

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1
Rhymin & Stealin
The Beastie Boys
00:04:07

The Beastie Boys, The Beastie Boys

℗ 1986 Def Jam Recordings, a division of UMG Recordings, Inc.

2
The New Style
The Beastie Boys
00:04:35

The Beastie Boys, The Beastie Boys

℗ 1986 Def Jam Recordings, a division of UMG Recordings, Inc.

3
She's Crafty
The Beastie Boys
00:03:35

The Beastie Boys, The Beastie Boys

℗ 1986 Def Jam Recordings, a division of UMG Recordings, Inc.

4
Posse In Effect
The Beastie Boys
00:02:26

The Beastie Boys, The Beastie Boys

℗ 1986 Def Jam Recordings, a division of UMG Recordings, Inc.

5
Slow Ride
The Beastie Boys
00:02:56

The Beastie Boys, The Beastie Boys

℗ 1986 Def Jam Recordings, a division of UMG Recordings, Inc.

6
Girls (Album Version)
The Beastie Boys
00:02:14

The Beastie Boys, The Beastie Boys

℗ 1986 Def Jam Recordings, a division of UMG Recordings, Inc.

7
(You Gotta) Fight For Your Right (To Party!) (Album Version)
The Beastie Boys
00:03:27

The Beastie Boys, The Beastie Boys

℗ 1986 UMG Recordings, Inc.

8
No Sleep Till Brooklyn (Album Version)
The Beastie Boys
00:04:06

The Beastie Boys, The Beastie Boys

℗ 1986 UMG Recordings, Inc.

9
Paul Revere (Album Version)
The Beastie Boys
00:03:41

The Beastie Boys, The Beastie Boys

℗ 1986 UMG Recordings, Inc.

10
Hold It Now, Hit It (Album Version)
The Beastie Boys
00:03:26

The Beastie Boys, The Beastie Boys

℗ 1986 UMG Recordings, Inc.

11
Brass Monkey (Album Version)
The Beastie Boys
00:02:37

The Beastie Boys, The Beastie Boys

℗ 1986 UMG Recordings, Inc.

12
Slow And Low
The Beastie Boys
00:03:38

The Beastie Boys, The Beastie Boys

℗ 1986 Def Jam Recordings, a division of UMG Recordings, Inc.

13
Time To Get Ill
The Beastie Boys
00:03:37

The Beastie Boys, The Beastie Boys

℗ 1986 Def Jam Recordings, a division of UMG Recordings, Inc.

Album review

Perhaps Licensed to Ill was inevitable -- a white group blending rock and rap, giving them the first number one album in hip-hop history. But that reading of the album's history gives short shrift to the Beastie Boys; producer Rick Rubin, and his label, Def Jam, and this remarkable record, since mixing metal and hip-hop isn't necessarily an easy thing to do. Just sampling and scratching Sabbath and Zeppelin to hip-hop beats does not make for an automatically good record, though there is a visceral thrill to hearing those muscular riffs put into overdrive with scratching. But, much of that is due to the producing skills of Rick Rubin, a metalhead who formed Def Jam Records with Russell Simmons and had previously flirted with this sound on Run-D.M.C.'s Raising Hell, not to mention a few singles and one-offs with the Beasties prior to this record. He made rap rock, but to give him lone credit for Licensed to Ill (as some have) is misleading, since that very same combination would not have been as powerful, nor would it have aged so well -- aged into a rock classic -- if it weren't for the Beastie Boys, who fuel this record through their passion for subcultures, pop culture, jokes, and the intoxicating power of wordplay. At the time, it wasn't immediately apparent that their obnoxious patter was part of a persona (a fate that would later plague Eminem), but the years have clarified that this was a joke -- although, listening to the cajoling rhymes, filled with clear parodies and absurdities, it's hard to imagine the offense that some took at the time. Which, naturally, is the credit of not just the music -- they don't call it the devil's music for nothing -- but the wild imagination of the Beasties, whose rhymes sear into consciousness through their gonzo humor and gleeful delivery. There hasn't been a funnier, more infectious record in pop music than this, and it's not because the group is mocking rappers (in all honesty, the truly twisted barbs are hurled at frat boys and lager lads), but because they've already created their own universe and points of reference, where it's as funny to spit out absurdist rhymes and pound out "Fight for Your Right (To Party)" as it is to send up street corner doo wop with "Girls." Then, there is the overpowering loudness of the record -- operating from the axis of where metal, punk, and rap meet, there never has been a record this heavy and nimble, drunk on its own power yet giddy with what they're getting away with. There is a sense of genuine discovery, of creating new music, that remains years later, after countless plays, countless misinterpretations, countless rip-off acts, even countless apologies from the Beasties, who seemed guilty by how intoxicating the sound of it is, how it makes beer-soaked hedonism sound like the apogee of human experience. And maybe it is, maybe it isn't, but in either case, Licensed to Ill reigns tall among the greatest records of its time.

© Stephen Thomas Erlewine /TiVo

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