The Best of Peanut Butter Wolf

RELEASE
February 12, 2002
LABEL
Copasetik Records
GENRES
Rap, Underground Rap, Turntablism

Album Review

The Best of Peanut Butter Wolf is a slightly premature release -- the turntable master, despite having released singles for over a decade, had only made one previous full-length album, 1999's My Vinyl Weighs a Ton, and a good chunk of that album is reprised here, occasionally remixed and even retitled -- but it's a solid overview of the skills of one of the best DJs in underground hip-hop. If anything, the album focuses too much on his work with various MCs (most notably My Vinyl Weighs a Ton's Rasco, who appears on half a dozen tracks) and not enough on the wiggy breakbeats and cerebral crosscutting that are Peanut Butter Wolf's true strengths. It's wild cutting contests like the nine-minute "Tale of Five Cities" and the self-explanatory "Styles, Crews, Flows, Beats" that really shine, but the album as a whole, with its brief inter-track examples of Peanut Butter Wolf's turntable skills, is a fine introduction.
Stewart Mason, Rovi

Track Listing

  1. Day One
  2. Suckas Don't Respect It
  3. Run the Line [Lord Finesse Remix]
  4. Barter
  5. Theme from a Peanut Butter Wolf
  6. Tale of 5 Cities
  7. Deep Sleep [Peanut Butter Wolf Remix]
  8. Peanut Versus Cappe
  9. Hey Love
  10. In Your Area
  11. T Shirts
  12. Styles, Crews, Flows, Beats
  13. What Ya'll Wanna Do
  14. Hip Hop Essentials
  15. Day Three