Released July 23, 1991 Release date 23 July 1991 | Length 46:14 | |
Recorded 1990–1991Homeboy Studio, Power Play Studios, Libra Digital(New York, New York) Hip hop music albums Critical Beatdown, Mecca and the Soul Brother, Long Live the Kane, Enta da Stage, Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em |
Main source breaking atoms full album 1991
Breaking Atoms is the debut album of Canadian/American hip hop group Main Source, released July 23, 1991 on Wild Pitch Records. Production for it was handled by the group and took place during 1990 to 1991 at Homeboy Studio, Power Play Studios, and Libra Digital in New York City. Recorded during the golden age of hip hop, Breaking Atoms is distinguished stylistically by its incorporation of jazz and soul music samples. The album has been highly regarded by music writers due mostly to its production, whose heavy and original use of sampling influenced hip hop producers for a considerable portion of the 1990s.
Contents
- Main source breaking atoms full album 1991
- Large professor on the making of main source s album breaking atoms
- Music
- Reception
- Accolades
- Track listing
- Personnel
- Songs
- References
The album has been widely regarded by writers and music critics as a significantly influential album and has been noted for debuting rapper Nas, who appears on the track "Live at the Barbeque". His contribution to the song was sampled on "Genesis", the intro track to his debut album Illmatic (1994). Breaking Atoms has been recognized as one of the most important records in hip hop history, and was out of print in the United States after the demise of Wild Pitch Records in 1997. It was reissued on April 22, 2008 through Fontana Distribution.
Large professor on the making of main source s album breaking atoms
Music
Breaking Atoms was produced using the E-mu SP-1200. Allmusic's Steve Huey writes that the album's acclaim lies mostly in its production, which popularized a number of now widely imitated techniques. Huey describes that the "intricately constructed tracks are filled with jazz and soul samples, layered percussion, off-kilter sampling effects, and an overall sonic richness." RapReviews also notes that the beats are the cornerstone of the record. Dan Nishimoto of PopMatters considers the album's sampling to be "neatly layered, its subject matter is modest, and its overall tone is simply well executed fun." In his book Classic Material: The Hip-Hop Album Guide, Oliver Wang writes that Large Professor as a producer "thinks in complete song structure, never focusing on one single element—a loop, a break—but always juggling them in unison."
Reception
Upon its release, Breaking Atoms received mostly positive reviews from music critics. Entertainment Weekly's James Bernard writes that "Main Source may not break much new ground, but [it] offer[s] a clever, quietly seductive collection in which the bass and drum tracks casually strut instead of stomp, and the sparse samples of guitar and horns allow..Large Professor's voice to take center stage." Since its initial reception, the album has received retrospective acclaim from writers and music critics. Allmusic writer Steve Huey declared it "one of the quintessential cult classics in hip-hop history." RapReviews notes that many acknowledge Breaking Atoms to be on a similar level to Nas' Illmatic (1994) and A Tribe Called Quest's first three albums.
Accolades
SoundProof magazine lists the album at number sixteen in "The Top 20 Toronto Albums Ever" and About.com's Henry Adaso lists it at number twenty in the "100 Greatest Hip-Hop Albums". In 2004's Rolling Stone Album Guide, Peter Relic writes that "From the candy-colored cover depicting the three members crowded around a fantasy science project to the uptempo beats and matching fast raps, it's a period piece whose meticulous presentation...make it an enduring pleasure from a bygone era." In 1998, The Source magazine selected the album as one of its 100 Best Rap Albums. Initially giving a four-and-a-half out of five "mic" rating, The Source gave the album a five "mic" rating in a retrospective list of "5 Mic Hip-Hop Classics" in its 150th issue.
Track listing
Personnel
Credits for Breaking Atoms adapted from Allmusic.
Songs
1Snake Eyes3:30
2Just Hangin’ Out4:10
3Looking at the Front Door4:12