In Full Gear

1988 studio album by Stetsasonic From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In Full Gear is the second studio album by American hip hop band Stetsasonic, released in 1988 by Tommy Boy Records.[3]

Quick facts Studio album by Stetsasonic, Released ...
In Full Gear
The group is featured wearing white jackets and pants. Both the group's name and album title appear on the top-right corner, colored in red and green respectively.
Studio album by
ReleasedJune 21, 1988[1]
Genre
Length63:31
Label
Producer
Stetsasonic chronology
On Fire
(1986)
In Full Gear
(1988)
Blood, Sweat & No Tears
(1991)
Singles from In Full Gear
  1. "Sally"
    Released: April 15, 1988
  2. "Talkin' All That Jazz"
    Released: September 16, 1988
  3. "Float On"
    Released: February 7, 1989
Close

Music and lyrics

In Full Gear is a double album that draws on various influences in its hip hop style, including R&B, jazz, dancehall reggae, and rock influences. It also incorporates beat-boxing, sampling technology, and live band performance.[3] "Freedom or Death" and "Talkin' All That Jazz" discuss credos of revolution and sampling, respectively.[4] On "Float On", a remake of The Floaters' 1977 song of the same name, rapper Wise envisions "a woman with a realistic imagination, a woman who thinks for herself, whose thoughts are bold and free".[4]

Critical reception

More information Review scores, Source ...
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusicStarStarStarStarStar[2]
QStarStarStarStar[5]
The Rolling Stone Album GuideStarStarStarStar[6]
The Village VoiceB+[4]
Close

In a contemporary review for The Village Voice, music critic Robert Christgau found the "well-meaning" band merely competent musically and said that their cover of "Float On" is "even ickier than the original". He was more enthusiastic about "Freedom or Death" and "Talking All That Jazz", and felt that In Full Gear succeeds on "a camaraderie that reaches deeper than the usual homeboy bonding".[4] In his own list for the Pazz & Jop critics poll, Christgau named "Talkin' All That Jazz" the seventeenth best single of 1988.[7]

Track listing

More information #, Title ...
# Title Producer(s) Performer (s)
1 "In Full Gear" Prince Paul Daddy-O, Frukwan, Wise, Delite
2 "DBC Let The Music Play" DBC Daddy-O, Frukwan, Wise, Delite
3 "Freedom Or Death" Daddy-O Daddy-O
4 "Float On" Vincent F. Bell Daddy-O, Frukwan, Wise, Delite
5 "Stet Troop '88!" Wise Daddy-O, Frukwan
6 "Pen & Paper" Prince Paul Daddy-O, Frukwan, Delite
7 "Music For The Stetfully Insane" Prince Paul *Instrumental*
8 "We're The Band" Prince Paul, Daddy-O Daddy-O, Wise, Frukwan
9 "Rollin' Wit Rush" Prince Paul, Daddy-O *Interlude*
10 "This Is It, Y'all [Go Stetsa II]" Daddy-O Daddy-O, Frukwan, Wise
11 "Extensions" Daddy-O *Interlude*
12 "Sally" Prince Paul Daddy-O, Delite, Wise
13 "Talkin' All That Jazz" Prince Paul Daddy-O, Frukwan, Wise, Delite
14 "It's In My Song" DBC Daddy-O, Frukwan, Delite
15 "The Odad" Daddy-O Daddy-O
16 "Miami Bass" Prince Paul, Daddy-O Daddy-O, Frukwan, Delite
17 "Showtime" DBC Wise, Frukwan, Daddy-O, Delite
18 "Talkin' All That Jazz [Dominoes Vocal Remix]" Daddy-O Frukwan, Daddy-O, Delite
19 "Talkin' All That Jazz [Dominoes Instrumental Remix]" Daddy-O *Instrumental*
20 "Talkin' All That Jazz [Dim's Radio Edit Remix]" Dimitri Frukwan, Daddy-O, Delite
Close

Charts

More information Chart (1988), Peak position ...
Close

Singles

More information Year, Song ...
Year Song Chart positions
R&B Rap Dance Sales
1988 "Sally" 25
1988 "Talkin' All That Jazz" 34 25
1989 "Float On" 56 24
Close

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI