Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Home Invasion (album)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Released
  
March 23, 1993

Length
  
73:55

Release date
  
23 March 1993

Producers
  
Evil E, Ice-T

Recorded
  
1992

Artist
  
Ice-T

Label
  
Priority Records

Home Invasion (album) httpsiytimgcomvitXPDkRtVxm4hqdefaultjpg

Home Invasion (1993)
  
Ice-T VI Return of the Real (1996)

Genres
  
Gangsta rap, West Coast hip hop, Hardcore hip hop, Political hip hop

Similar
  
Ice-T albums, Gangsta rap albums

Ice t home invasion 1993 full album


Home Invasion is the fifth studio album by American rapper Ice-T. The album was released on March 23, 1993. The album which was originally set to be released in 1992 as part of his deal with Sire and Warner Bros. Records was Ice-T's first official release as an artist on his own label Rhyme Syndicate Records, now in full control of the content of the release, as part of his new distribution deal with Priority Records.

Contents

Background

Home Invasion was the first album that Ice-T released following the controversy over the Body Count song "Cop Killer." Sire/Warner Bros. Records had stood by freedom of expression during the controversy, although some within the Time Warner conglomerate now favored a more pragmatic policy. The album was originally set for a November 15, 1992 release, but the Rodney King riots were still fresh in people's minds, an election was in process, and political releases by Ice Cube and Dr. Dre were causing controversy, so Ice-T agreed to postpone Home Invasion's release, in addition to removing the song "Ricochet," which had already appeared on the soundtrack to the film of the same name.

With the album's release postponed to February 14, 1993, Sire/Warner Bros. told Ice-T that it would not release the album with its current artwork, painted by Dave Halili (cover artist for Body Count), which depicted a white youth who is seemingly immersed in black culture surrounded by images of violence, mayhem and disorder. Although the catalog number 45119 was already assigned to it and the single “Gotta Lotta Love” was released, the album was still deferred. Ice-T initially agreed, opting for an all-black cover and a name change to The Black Album. He later realized that his future output was going to be continuously monitored and censored, so he left the label amicably, signing a distribution deal with Priority Records, which released the album with the originally intended artwork. Due to the postponed release of the album, tracks were altered to keep the topics up-to-date.

Reception

The album peaked at #9 on Billboard magazine's Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums and at #14 on the Billboard 200. Home Invasion was met with mixed reviews from music critics. Robert Christgau gave the album a B+, saying "At first it sounds as if the bad guys won--from sexy stories to O.G. kissoffs, he spends too much time proving he's still Ice Motherfucking T. But in fact he contextualizes himself as shrewdly as ever." Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic gave the album two and a half stars out of five, saying "Given the fact that most of Home Invasion was recorded during and after the "Cop Killer" media firestorm, it comes as no surprise that the album is an uneven, muddled affair, not the clean, focused attack of O.G. Original Gangster."

Songs

1Warning0:36
2It’s On4:51
3Ice MF T3:34

References

Home Invasion (album) Wikipedia