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Hello Nasty | 
enlarge | Artist: Beastie Boys Label: Capitol Category: Music
List Price: $17.98 Buy Used: $0.01 You Save: $17.97 (100%)
New (41) Used (169) Collectible (7) from $0.01
Rating: 424 reviews Sales Rank: 7809
Format: Explicit Lyrics Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 37716 UPC: 724383771622 EAN: 0724383771622 ASIN: B000007TE8
Release Date: July 14, 1998 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| • | Super Disco Breakin' | | • | The Move | | • | Remote Control | | • | Song For The Man | | • | Just A Test | | • | Body Movin' | | • | Intergalactic | | • | Sneakin' Out The Hospital | | • | Putting Shame In Your Game | | • | Flowin' Prose | | • | And Me | | • | Three MC's And One DJ | | • | The Grasshopper Unit (Keep Movin') | | • | Song For Junior | | • | I Don't Know | | • | The Negotiation Limerick File | | • | Electrify | | • | Picture This | | • | Unite | | • | Dedication | | • | Dr. Lee Ph.D - (with Money Mark) | | • | Instant Death |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com's Best of 1998 It's been a dozen years since the Beastie Boys broke, and on Hello Nasty, they show that--though they've grown up, matured, and just gotten older--they're still in touch with the inner brat that always made them so much fun. Turns out that the brat's turned into an ace record collector with choice taste in collaborators, too. --Randy Silver
Amazon.com essential recording On their previous album, Ill Communication, the Beastie Boys expanded their parameters yet again, melding cutting-edge hip-hop with slinky jazz, butt-wiggling funk, weepy classical, and combustive punk rock. Four years down the line, the group's music isn't nearly as organic. They've all but abandoned the guitars and returned to the kind of old-school beats and rhythms that defined their groundbreaking 1989 disc, Paul's Boutique. But Hello Nasty isn't a regression, and it's anything but a cop-out: in addition to resurrecting the best elements from their past, the Beastie Boys have embraced the dopest high tech gizmos of the computer age. Hello Nasty gurgles like galactic sulfur pools, whizzes like a Sega game, and slurps and thumps like the best backward Hendrix loops. Add in a cavalcade of Latin percussion, calliope keyboards, and exotic samples (Stravinsky, Stephen Sondheim, Jazz Crusaders, Rachmaninoff), and you're left with one of the most creative and jubilant hip-hop records to date, even if you exclude witty lyrics like, "I'm the king of Boggle / There is none higher / I get 11 points off the word quagmire" ("Putting Shame in Your Game"). To paraphrase über-critic Robert Christgau, Paul's Boutique may have been the band's Pet Sounds, but Hello Nasty is the Beasties' Sgt. Pepper's. --Jon Wiederhorn
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| Customer Reviews: Read 419 more reviews...
Far weaker than their previous albums May 4, 2008 G. Simonson (San Jose, CA USA) This doesn't hold a candle to Check Your Head or Paul's Boutique. There are some decent tracks, but lyrically this was a huge slide for them. It just sounds forced and there is a lot of mediocre filler... Buy one of those two albums first (CYH or PB), then get Ill Communication and Licensed to Ill. This album is better than 5 boroughs but thats about it...
Don't try to compromise, you need the five Beastie albums... March 20, 2008 Untitled (nowhere) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
"Hello Nasty, the Beastie Boys' fifth album, is a head-spinning listen loaded with analog synthesizers, old drum machines, call-and-response vocals, freestyle rhyming, futuristic sound effects, and virtuoso turntable scratching. The Beasties have long been notorious for their dense, multi-layered explosions, but Hello Nasty is their first record to build on the multi-ethnic junk culture breakthrough of Check Your Head, instead of merely replicating it. Moving from electro-funk breakdowns to Latin-soul jams to spacey pop, Hello Nasty covers as much ground as Check Your Head or Ill Communication, but the flow is natural, like Paul's Boutique, even if the finish is retro-stylized. Hiring DJ Mixmaster Mike (one of the Invisibl Skratch Piklz) turned out to be a masterstroke; he and the Beasties created a sound that strongly recalls the spare electronic funk of the early '80s, but spiked with the samples and post-modern absurdist wit that have become their trademarks. On the surface, the sonic collages of Hello Nasty don't appear as dense as Paul's Boutique, nor is there a single as grabbing as "Sabotage," but given time, little details emerge, and each song forms its own identity. A few stray from the course, and the ending is a little anticlimactic, but that doesn't erase the riches of Hello Nasty - the old-school kick of "Super Disco Breakin'" and "The Move"; Adam Yauch's crooning on "I Don't Know"; Lee "Scratch" Perry's cameo; and the recurring video game samples, to name just a few. The sonic adventures alone make the album noteworthy, but what makes it remarkable is how it looks to the future by looking to the past. There's no question that Hello Nasty is saturated in old-school sounds and styles, but by reviving the future-shock rock of the early '80s, the Beasties have shrewdly set themselves up for the new millennium." -Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Allmusic.com Well, that's almost correct, every song on here rules, and Anti-climatic ending? Bull_____. Still though, even though Allmusic.com isn't a reliable source (it sucks), I thought this was almost on the mark. Life is weird. 10/10
Three mc's and one dj! October 16, 2007 A. Pierre (Somewheres) Beastie Boys always seem to have fun while making a record. Thats why I love there style; You want hear them duet with a pop star, make a slow love song, or make a radio friendly hit. There raps are probably some of the greatest raps i've ever heard and ive heard alot. While I love the Wu Tang Clan, its hard to argue that the Beastie Boys are the best in the rap buisness. This whole cd flows well and there is not a weak track on it. Check it out.
My first CD September 2, 2007 Dr. Rock (VT) After I stopped buying cassettes, this was the first album I purchased on CD. Ever since, it's remained one of my favorite albums.
Solid Beasite Boys FLAAAAVA February 9, 2007 Daniel McKinnon (Tewksbury, MA USA) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
'Hello Nasty' by the Beastie Boys is one of their best offerings ever put down. With this album the Beasties felt like they were as solid as they ever were and you could just get the general feel that they really enjoyed making this album. Even the commercially friendly tracks such as 'Intergalactic' and 'Body Movin' could be enjoyed by the alternative masses, and there are plenty of other tracks here ~20 in total with all sorts of different styles that many a fans will appreciate the smooth sounds coming out of their speakers. If you like Rap and/or alternative hip-hop you owe it to yourself to pick up 'Hello Nasty' and enjoy one of the most unique bands in the genre. ***** HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
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