Black Sheep

A Wolf In Sheep's Clothing

  • MOG Editorial Review

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    Though they clearly aligned themselves with like-minded acts including A Tribe Called Quest, Black Sheep were quick to live up to their name within the opening seconds of A Wolf in Sheep's Clothing, their debut album. During the album's intro, they announce that they're too crass for the usual alt-rap scene but too smart to be mainstream or gangster, and the rest of the songs confirm that statement. Taking on the falsehoods of gangster rap over dancefloor-ready beats, "Are You Mad" doubles as a spot-on social critique and club anthem. For the most part, the duo stuck to that formula, and it's hard to argue with tracks as fun and thought-provoking as the jazzy "Have U.N.E. Pull."
  • AMG Review of Wolf in Sheep's Clothing

    Amg
    John Bush
    All Music Guide

    Playfully satirical, witty, and incredibly imaginative, A Wolf in Sheep's Clothing introduced one of the freshest talents in early-'90s rap, a self-produced duo who caught the tail end of the Native Tongues family. Though Dres and Mista Lawnge didn't match the brilliant wordplay of A Tribe Called Quest or De La Soul, their topics were well-chosen, they were presented in a hilarious context, and every song was backed up by strong productions and great rapping. A Wolf in Sheep's Clothing wasn't a comedy record, but it was difficult to tell when the duo were half-serious or half-joking, especially since they were often the objects of their jokes. They poked fun at many aspects of black music and culture of the early '90s, everything from the persuasive gangster mentality ("U Mean I'm Not"), obsessions over the Afrocentric viewpoint ("Are You Mad?"), and lewd sex raps ("La Menage"), as well as an amusingly incorrect response to feminism ("L.A.S.M."). They also dropped a few of the best hip-hop club tracks of the era, the insanely catchy items "The Choice Is Yours (Revisited)," "Try Counting Sheep," and "Flavor of the Month." (Another smooth dance tune, "Strobelite Honey," was dreadfully honest about girls who look better under the lights than upon closer inspection.) Polar opposites to the ranks of somber political rappers, and deftly counteracting the indulgence and self-seriousness of many alternative groups, Black Sheep hit a height with their debut that few hip-hop acts would ever reach.

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