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Master Release

Shortcut Code: [m44294]
Data Quality Rating: Correct
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Ratings

4.43 / 5 (299 votes)

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102 want this

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Streets, The - Original Pirate Material

Genre:
Electronic, Hip Hop
Style:
House, Garage House
Year:
2002

Tracklist

Turn The Page 3:15 X
Has It Come To This? 4:04 X
Let's Push Things Forward 3:51 X
Sharp Darts 1:33 X
Same Old Thing 3:22 X
Geezers Need Excitement 3:46 X
It's Too Late 4:10 X
Too Much Brandy 3:02 X
Don't Mug Yourself 2:39 X
Who Got The Funk? 1:50 X
The Irony Of It All 3:29 X
Weak Become Heroes 5:33 X
Who Dares Wins 0:34 X
Stay Positive 6:16 X

Versions

Title, FormatLabelCat#CountryYear
Original Pirate Material (CD, Album) 679 Recordings, 679 Recordings 679003CDLP, 0927 43568 2 UK 2002
Original Pirate Material (2xLP) 679 Recordings 679003TLP UK 2002
Original Pirate Material (CD, Album) 679 Recordings, Warner Music (Australia) 0927435682, 0927-43568-2 Australia 2002
Original Pirate Material (CD, Album) 679 Recordings, Warner Music (Canada) 679003CDLP, 2 43568 Canada 2002
Original Pirate Material (CD, Album, Enh) Atlantic, Vice Records 93181-2 US 2002
Original Pirate Material (CD, Album, Enh) WEA, Warner Music (Japan) WPCR-11232 Japan 2002
Original Pirate Material (Clean Edit) (CD, Promo, For) Vice Records PRCD 301065B US 2003
▸ show all 6 reviews

Reviews & Discussion

Review by raindance_rob Aug 17, 2007 (edited over 2 years ago)

referencing Original Pirate Material, 2xLP, 679003TLP

Im not into UK Garage but this album is an exception. It caused such a storm, it was unique, fresh & something very very different. What i like about The Streets is that what Mike raps about is to the point, relevant & he obviously knows the score & what he's talking about. My fav tune has to be "Has It Come To This?" with the vocals "...Original Pirate Material..." being the best part of the tune...pure genius! The only down side to this album is that every tune is faded into one another & this can make it abit hard to mix with.
Rated 5/5
Review by andyman5 May 01, 2007 (edited over 2 years ago)

referencing Original Pirate Material, CD, Album, 679003CDLP, 0927 43568 2

As legend goes...Mike Skinner apparently nicked most of the beats from some other Garage duo to create this record. So goes music. Master steals from protege as protege steals from other. This has been going on for ages. In any regard...this was one of the best 'pop' records of 2002. Combinging UK garage technique with lager lad lyrics and sharp wit and flow, Mike Skinner is an MC to be reckoned with. He puts his pulse on the heartbeat of the UK and counts out that pattern as a loop for a track. He got the pulse and timing right to capture a hundred thousand would be newbee ravers as well as the old schoolers too. He translated that 'get away from it all weekend' with tracks that made you feel pissed or off yer face on fungus in the 'Dam. Skinner also made softer tracks about young love and regret that balanced all the substance abuse with a little humility. This makes it a pop record to me and great at the same time... and pop isn't necessarily a bad word. In all regards, stolen beats or not, this is a pretty great record.
Rated 5/5
Review by pipecock Apr 24, 2006 (edited over 3 years ago)

referencing Original Pirate Material, CD, Album, 679003CDLP, 0927 43568 2

Alot of people are skeptical of Mike Skinner because of his delivery. In all actuality, the guy has more style and substance than any 10 MCs you can think of in mainsteam or underground hiphop today. On this album, he's brilliantly witty, his beats are diverse and interesting, and his subject matter is far from the norm in hiphop. Absolutely a classic release!
Rated 5/5
Review by manchester Sep 13, 2005 (edited over 4 years ago)

referencing Original Pirate Material, 2xLP, 679003TLP

This album came out of nowhere with a huge bang. There was so much tripe around, very little originality, nobody speaking up for the current generation or saying anything worth saying about the (British) society we live in today. Then along comes the supremely talented Mike Skinner with this ultra classic creation from his bedroom. It sounds like it was made on equipment from yesteryear but that does not detract from this release one bit. Astounding lyrics that are incredibly witty and poignant at the same time, sung at street level, backed by clever funky beats. This is urban poetry for the 21st century generation.
Review by pisces Sep 16, 2004 (edited over 5 years ago)

referencing Original Pirate Material, CD, Album, 679003CDLP, 0927 43568 2

when i first heard this, i didn't know what to think of it. it was certainly different, but in a good way? i don't know, but it wasn't in a bad way; that's for sure. in america, i hear hip-hop a lot and it's usually from radio. most of it all of it is crap, so this was a good change of pace. unfortunatly, because it was so different and unique i didn't understand it initially. now, after repeat listens, mike skinner in my eyes has become one of the saviors of rap in its raw form. not necessary about the beats, but entirey about the lyrics.
Rated 5/5
Review by shanethedominator Dec 05, 2002

referencing Original Pirate Material, CD, Album, 679003CDLP, 0927 43568 2

groundbreaking release, artistic & experiemental to the fullest. As branded it carries certain degrees of Garage & hip hop influences but with that we aren't talking 2Pac meets The Artful Dodger. Its like The Prodigy were to the dance scene, can't just be labelled with one genre - maybe best described as a unique sounding, pure form of material of the future.