DJ Jazzy Jeff & Fresh Prince - Homebase
Album Facts
Original Release Date: July 23, 1991
Certified Double Platinum
#12 Billboard 200
#5 Top R&B/Hip Hop Albums
American Music Award for Favorite Rap/Hip Hop Album
Summertime
#4 Billboard Hot 100
#1 Hot R&B/Hip Hop Singles
#1 Hot Rap Singles
Grammy Award for Best Rap Performance by Duor or a Group
Ring My Bell
#20 Billboard Hot 100
#22 Hot R&B/Hip Hop Singles
The Things That U Do
#43 Hot R&B /Hip Hop Singles
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Tracklisting
- I'm All That
- Summertime
- The Things that U Do
- This Boy is Smooth
- Ring My Bell
- Dog is a Dog
- Caught in the Middle
(Love & Life)
- Trapped on the Dance Floor
- Who Stole the DJ
- You Saw My Blinker
- Dumb Dancin'
- Summertime (Reprise)
Album Reviews
All
Music Guide
4
and a half stars out of 5
After
enduring a temporary sales slump, DJ Jazzy Jeff And The Fresh
Prince roared back with Homebase. They scored a huge pop and
R&B hit with "Summertime," using Kool &
The Gang's "Summer Madness" single for the music
base while Will Smith rapped about romantic hopes and community
barbeques. He landed another Top 20 single with "Ring
My Bell," this time reworking Anita Ward's oldie while
offering his own double-entendre take.
Undoubtedly
helped by the success of his television show, this album returned
the duo to platinum status, even as Smith showed once more
(protests to the contrary notwithstanding) that he was an
accomplished pop rapper.
--
Ron Wynn
Q Magazine
DJ
Jazzy Jeff/The Fresh Prince
Since
the rapsome duet's last LP was released in 1989, The Fresh
Prince (aka Will Smith) has become an American TV star in "The Fresh Prince Of Bel Air" (briefly glimpsed
on BBC2), in which our hero plays a streetwise home boy whose
enforced sojourn with affluent relatives in Beverly Hills
elicits corny but cute culture clash chuckles. In terms of
style, content and delivery HOMEBASE picks up neatly where
its predecessor left offI'M ALL THAT indulges in the
obligatory round of bragging, whilst This Boy Is Smooth and
A Dog Is A Dog catalogue the Prince's amorous adventures,
snappy rhymes fired off with the tongue firmly implanted in
cheek and Summertime lifts Kool And The Gang's Summer Madness
to concoct a mellifluous, sun-baked groove. Sampling everyone
from James Brown to Bugs Bunny, HOMEBASE steers clear of misogyny,
violence and garden furniture, and in the process hits the
button almost every time.
-
Paul Davies
(Issue
#60)(September 1991)
CMJ
Before
Hammer was making Coke commercials, the biggest crossover
rap group was the Philly duo of DJ Jazzy Jeff And The Fresh
Prince with "Parents Just Don't Understand" that
was . fine-tuned with a mass-appealing, pop-oriented sound.
Now after a couple years away from the studio (recording,
that is), the duo returns with a surprisingly exceptional
album, Homebase. Growing a few years older and sidestepping
an overly predictable campaign, Jeff and the Fresh Prince
(Of Bel Air) come off with plenty of commercial appeal, but
without meandering in adolescent fantasy. Prince's delivery
is slow and cool-a deeper tone rocks his rhymes (most evident
on the Kool & The Gang-influenced, jeep-blaster "Summertime").
Thankfully, there's not much here to remind you of his whiny
old style of rapping (The Fresh Prince Of Bel Air theme is
horrible), instead there's just typical rhyming fun with all
the makings of another crossover hit. Touch these bases: "I'm
All That," the revamped, 1979 Anita Ward disco hit "Ring
My Bell" and "A Dog Is A Dog."
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