Product Overview
Title: Madvillainy Demos
Label: Stones Throw Records
Format: Vinyl
Country: US
Released: 2024-11-29
Genre: Hip Hop
Style: Boom Bap
A1 Do Not Fire! (Demo)
A2 Bistro (Demo)
A3 One False Move (“Great Day” Demo)
A4 America’s Most Blunted (Demo)
A5 Operation Lifesaver… AKA Mint Test (Demo)
A6 Figaro (Demo)
A7 Rainbows (Demo)
B1 Just For Kicks ("Meat Grinder" Demo)
B2 Fancy Clown (Demo)
B3 Shadow Of Tomorrow (Demo)
B4 Money Folder (Demo)
B5 Stakes (“Supervillain Theme” Demo)
B6 All Caps (Demo)
B7 One False Move (“Great Day” Demo Instrumental)
The tracklist on the record's label is a misprint. On the record, Side A of this album ends at "Rainbows (Demo)". Side B begins with "Just for Kicks".
Another misprint is present on the back cover, which numbers track positions 7 and 8 twice. This causes the tracklist to end at 12 songs, yet actually contains 14 songs.
Sticker on shrink wrap reads:
"DOOM AND MADLIB
MADVILLAIN DEMOS
EARLY DEMOS OF THE ICONIC HIP-HOP ALBUM
FIRST TIME ON VINYL
In November 2002, the first demo sequence of Madvillainy leaked online. The tracks contained early vocal cuts from Madlib's Bomb Shelter studio. It may have been unfinished, but fans understood that this was a hip-hop album unlike any other.
DOOM rerecorded vocals - alluding to the leak on "Rhinestone Cowboy" - and Madlib added new beats and changed up the sequence. Leaks could kill an album's momentum in the early 2000s, but the demos only whetted fans' appetites; when Madvillainy came out in 2004 it was "One of the most anticipated released in underground rap history," according to Pitchfork. Madvillainy is now regarded as one of the greatest hip-hop albums of all time."
Barcode and other identifiers
Barcode 6 59457 21965 9
Label: Stones Throw Records
Format: Vinyl
Country: US
Released: 2024-11-29
Genre: Hip Hop
Style: Boom Bap
A1 Do Not Fire! (Demo)
A2 Bistro (Demo)
A3 One False Move (“Great Day” Demo)
A4 America’s Most Blunted (Demo)
A5 Operation Lifesaver… AKA Mint Test (Demo)
A6 Figaro (Demo)
A7 Rainbows (Demo)
B1 Just For Kicks ("Meat Grinder" Demo)
B2 Fancy Clown (Demo)
B3 Shadow Of Tomorrow (Demo)
B4 Money Folder (Demo)
B5 Stakes (“Supervillain Theme” Demo)
B6 All Caps (Demo)
B7 One False Move (“Great Day” Demo Instrumental)
The tracklist on the record's label is a misprint. On the record, Side A of this album ends at "Rainbows (Demo)". Side B begins with "Just for Kicks".
Another misprint is present on the back cover, which numbers track positions 7 and 8 twice. This causes the tracklist to end at 12 songs, yet actually contains 14 songs.
Sticker on shrink wrap reads:
"DOOM AND MADLIB
MADVILLAIN DEMOS
EARLY DEMOS OF THE ICONIC HIP-HOP ALBUM
FIRST TIME ON VINYL
In November 2002, the first demo sequence of Madvillainy leaked online. The tracks contained early vocal cuts from Madlib's Bomb Shelter studio. It may have been unfinished, but fans understood that this was a hip-hop album unlike any other.
DOOM rerecorded vocals - alluding to the leak on "Rhinestone Cowboy" - and Madlib added new beats and changed up the sequence. Leaks could kill an album's momentum in the early 2000s, but the demos only whetted fans' appetites; when Madvillainy came out in 2004 it was "One of the most anticipated released in underground rap history," according to Pitchfork. Madvillainy is now regarded as one of the greatest hip-hop albums of all time."
Barcode and other identifiers
Barcode 6 59457 21965 9