Jungle Brothers

Straight Out The Jungle

  • MOG Editorial Review

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    Released in 1988, Straight Out the Jungle helped open the doors for the jazz-influenced hip-hop that would come to represent the genre's alternative in the years after. Beyond, that, though, Straight Out the Jungle should be recognized as a classic because it's production is influenced by far more than just jazz, incorporating everything from soul to old school pioneers to the then-emerging genre of house music. Kicking off with samples from Grandmaster Flash classic "The Message," everything the Jungle Brothers put together on Straight Out the Jungle doubles as a musical history lesson while its rhymes address the political present, and songs like "I'll House You" were yet another step forward for dance music crossing paths with hip-hop. Even if you don't recognize the many well-crafted samples throughout, there's plenty for even casual hip-hop fans to enjoy.
  • AMG Review of Straight Out the Jungle

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    Steve Huey
    All Music Guide

    The landmark opening salvo from the Jungle Brothers, Straight out the Jungle was also the very first album from the Native Tongues posse, which would utterly transform hip-hop over the next few years. That alone would be enough to make it a groundbreaking release, but Straight out the Jungle also contains the musical seeds for a number of soon to be dominant trends. Their taste for jazzy horn samples helped kickstart the entire jazz-rap movement, and their concurrent James Brown fixation was one of the first to follow Eric B. & Rakim's lead. Plus, the group's groundbreaking collaboration with legendary house producer Todd Terry, "I'll House You," is also here; it paved the way for numerous hip-house hybrids that shot up the dance and pop charts over the next few years. The lyrics were often as cerebral as the music was adventurous and eclectic, appealing to the mind rather than the gut -- and the fact that rap didn't necessarily have to sound as though it were straight off the streets was fairly revelatory at the time. "Black Is Black" and the title cut are some of the first flowerings of Afrocentric hip-hop, but the group isn't always so serious; "I'm Gonna Do You," "Behind the Bush," and the sly, classic "Jimbrowski" are all playfully sexy without descending into misogyny. To modern ears, Straight out the Jungle will likely sound somewhat dated -- the raw, basement-level production is pretty rudimentary even compared to their second album, and makes the jazz-rap innovations a bit difficult to fully comprehend, plus the album ends on several throwaways. But it is possible to hear the roots of hip-hop's intellectual wing, not to mention a sense of fun and positivity that hearkened back to the music's earliest Sugar Hill days -- and that's why Straight out the Jungle ultimately holds up.

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