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Ambushed (album)

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Ambushed
Studio album by
Released1994
Studio
GenreHip-hop
Length47:36
LabelReprise
Producer
Da Bush Babees chronology
Ambushed
(1994)
Gravity
(1996)
Singles from Ambushed
  1. "Swing It"
    Released: 1994
  2. "We Run Things (It's Like Dat)"
    Released: 1994
  3. "Remember We"
    Released: 1995

Ambushed is the debut studio album by American hip-hop group Da Bush Babees. It was released on December 6, 1994, via Reprise Records. The recording sessions took place at Desta Recording Studios, Greene St. Recording, D&D Studios, The Crib/Palm Tree Studios, Unique Recording Studios, and Chung King Studios, in New York, and at Krosswire Studio in Atlanta, with additional recording at Firehouse Studio in New York. The album was produced by J. Prins, Jermaine Dupri, Mark Batson, Nikke Nicole, Leroy Southwell, Salaam Remi, Ali Shaheed Muhammad, Mr. Man, Babe-B-Face Kaos, and Y-Tee. It features a guest appearance from 2 Unorthodox.

In the United States, the album debuted at number 83 on the Top R&B Albums charts. It was supported with three singles: "Swing It", "We Run Things (It's Like Dat)" and "Remember We". Its second single, "We Run Things" peaked at number 99 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and number 41 on the Hot Rap Songs charts. The third single off of the album, "Remember We", made it to number 34 on the Hot Rap Songs chart.

Critical reception

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Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
Chicago Tribune[2]
Entertainment WeeklyB+[3]
The Source[4]

Dimitri Ehrlich of Entertainment Weekly found the Brooklyn trio "lay witty similes and culturally resonant references over frenetic dancehall backdrops on Ambushed", he continued: "their wild-style assault on language is always lighthearted but never lightweight".[3] The Chicago Tribune noted that "Y-Tee, Bae-B-Face Kaos and Mr. Man swing fat lyrics over fatter beats in a fluid, this-side-of-crazy style reminiscent of Poor Righteous Teachers crossed with Cypress Hill."[2] Joseph Charles of The Source noted that "their style is hard to catch at first, but it's extremely clever", resuming: "while there is a bit of material that could be classified as filler ("Clear My Throat" is one example)... Da Bush Babees bring more than enough to satisfy reggae hip-hop fans and freestyle fanatics".[4] AllMusic's John Bush wrote: "Da Bush Babees mix hip-hop and reggae rhythms. Even their delivery switches back and forth between hip-hop cool and ragga hot".[1]

Track listing

[edit]
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Intro"  0:32
2."Pon de Attack"
  • Jamahl Hanna
  • Harold Lee
  • Acklins Dillon
  • Joe Matias
  • Mark Brown
  • Winston Riley
  • J. Prins
  • Mr. Man (co.)
3:35
3."Put It Down"Jermaine Dupri3:39
4."Original"
4:48
5."Ruff N' Rugged"
  • Hanna
  • Lee
  • Dillon
  • Nicole Miller
  • Leroy Southwell
  • Nikke Nicole
  • Leroy Southwell
3:44
6."Just Can't Stand It"
Salaam Remi4:46
7."Da Ignorant No It All"  1:48
8."Hit 'Em Up" (featuring II Unorthodox)
  • Hanna
  • Lee
  • Dillon
  • Tyrone Cooper
  • Sydney Prince
  • Miller
Nikke Nicole3:50
9."We Run Things (It's Like Dat)"
Ali Shaheed Muhammad4:11
10."Get on Down"
Jermaine Dupri3:38
11."Remember We"
  • Hanna
  • Lee
  • Dillon
  • Matias
J. Prins4:35
12."Clear My Throat (Ya Mammy)"
  • Hanna
  • Lee
  • Dillon
  • Matias
  • K. Dillon
  • Fred Bridges
  • Richard Knight
  • Bobby Eaton
  • J. Prins
  • Mr. Man (co.)
4:17
13."Swing It (Jazziness)"
  • Hanna
  • Lee
  • Dillon
  • Matias
J. Prins4:13
Total length:47:36
Sample credits

Personnel

[edit]
  • Acklins "Mr. Man" Dillon – vocals (tracks: 2–6, 8–13), co-producer (tracks: 2, 12)
  • Jamahl "Y-Tee" Hanna – vocals (tracks: 2–6, 8–13), co-producer (track 4)
  • Harold "Babe-B-Face Kaos" Lee – vocals (tracks: 2–6, 8–13), co-producer (track 4)
  • Jermaine Dupri – additional vocals, producer & mixing (tracks: 3, 10)
  • Dalili Batson – additional vocals (track 4)
  • Tyrone "Chase" Cooper – additional vocals (track 8)
  • Sydney Prince – additional vocals (track 8)
  • Catfish – live drums (track 4)
  • Vincent Henry – saxophone (track 6)
  • Leo Colon – piano & bass (track 11)
  • Joe "J. Prins" Matias – producer & mixing (tracks: 2, 11–13)
  • Mark Batson – producer & mixing (track 4)
  • Nicole "Nikke Nikole" Miller – producer & mixing (tracks: 5, 8)
  • Leroy Southwell – producer (track 5)
  • Salaam Remi Gibbs – producer (track 6)
  • Ali Shaheed Muhammad – producer (track 9)
  • Don Elliott – engineering (tracks: 2, 12)
  • Phil Tan – engineering & mixing (tracks: 3, 10)
  • Gregory Mann – engineering (tracks: 4, 12), mixing (tracks: 2, 4)
  • Allen Title – engineering & mixing (tracks: 5, 8)
  • Eddison Michael Sainsbury – engineering & mixing (track 6)
  • Gary Dean Noble – engineering & mixing (track 6)
  • Tim Latham – engineering (track 9)
  • Gavin Morrison – engineering (track 11)
  • Bob Power – mixing (tracks: 9, 13)
  • Yoram Vazan – mixing (tracks: 11, 12)
  • Carlos Bess – mixing (track 13)
  • Nolan Moffitte – engineering assistant (tracks: 2, 11–13)
  • Brian Frye – engineering assistant (tracks: 3, 10)
  • Djinji Brown – engineering assistant (tracks 4)
  • David Carpenter – engineering assistant (tracks 5)
  • FatKevneck P. – engineering assistant (tracks 6)
  • Robert "Void" Caprio – engineering assistant (tracks 9)
  • Steve Clark – engineering assistant (tracks 11)
  • Tom Coyne – mastering
  • Bart Phillips – executive producer
  • Benny Medina – executive producer
  • Carolyn Quan – art direction, design
  • Kurt Mundahl – photography
  • Diane Makowski – A&R
  • Paulette White – A&R
  • Peter Edge – A&R

Charts

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Chart (1994) Peak
position
US Top R&B Albums (Billboard)[5] 83

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Bush, John. "Ambushed - Ambushed, Da Bush Babees | Album | AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved January 13, 2025.
  2. ^ a b Preston, Rohan B. (16 Feb 1995). "Recordings". Tempo. Chicago Tribune. p. 7.
  3. ^ a b Ehrlich, Dimitri (December 16, 1994). "Ambushed | EW.com". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved November 6, 2015 – via Wayback Machine.
  4. ^ a b Charles, Joseph (January 1995). "Record Report". The Source. p. 91.
  5. ^ "Top R&B Albums". Billboard. Vol. 106, no. 52. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. December 24, 1994. p. 30. ISSN 0006-2510. Archived from the original on July 15, 2019. Retrieved January 13, 2025.
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