Queen Music:

All Hail the Queen




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'All Hail the Queen
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Queen Music:
All Hail the Queen



Music
All Hail the Queen
by Queen Latifah

All Hail the Queen
List Price: $16.98Label: Warner Spec. Mkt. UK

Salesrank: 152997

Released: November 1, 1989
Our Price: $8.81
Used Price: $4.41
Media: Audio CD

All Hail the Queen Track Listing:
1. Dance for Me - Queen Latifah, Owens, Dana
2. Mama Gave Birth to the Soul Children - Queen Latifah, Trugoy the Dove
3. Come into My House - Queen Latifah, Owens, Dana
4. Latifah's Law
5. Wrath of My Madness
6. The Pros
7. Ladies First - Queen Latifah, Faber, Shane
8. A King and Queen Creation - Queen Latifah, Apache
9. Queen of Royal Badness - Queen Latifah, Welch, L.
10. Evil That Men Do - Queen Latifah, Parker, L.
11. Princess of the Posse
12. Inside Out
13. Dance for Me
14. Wrath of My Madness
15. Princess of the Posse

Editorial Review:
1989 debut album from the hip hop/film star features guest appearances from De La Soul & Monie Love. 15 tracks. Tommy Boy.

Description of All Hail the Queen:
Latifah was the first major woman rapper to build a career on positivity, and this debut is proud, funny, and self-assured. Latifah knows she's the best so she doesn't have to tear down anyone else to prove it. Neatly produced (with simple, dance-friendly beats, mostly by loop-master DJ Mark the 45 King) and stylistically varied (including a couple of expert forays into dancehall reggae), it collects her early singles along with a bunch of convincing pronouncements of her royalty. Where she shines most, though, is on a couple of duets: "Mama Gave Birth to the Soul Children," with De La Soul clowning around under her tutelage, and "Ladies First," with Monie Love deftly trading verses with her. --Douglas Wolk

All Hail the Queen Reviews:
Pre-Grammy Greatness From The Queen of Royal Badness 4 Star Review
2007-03-25 - In a masculine dominated genre, not many ladies of hip hop were representing especially back in 1988-1989. Salt-N-Peppa, Sweet Tee, MC Lyte, and Roxanne Shante were a few very successful female artists. When Queen Latifah came onto the scene, she was unlike anything coming out at the time. Her mix of dancehall reggae, R and B, Jazz, House, and rappin' ability became unwordly to 1988 ears. Male or female, she may be the most versatile emcee to do it. "All Hail The Queen" is her shining moment which redefined emceeing as we know it.

The opening song "Dance For Me" is a great example of her versatility blending jazz with upbeat swing over a melodic 45 King production. When the single dropped in 1989, it got many heads buzzing. It wasn't no one hit wonder fluke because "All Hail The Queen" is packed with hit material. "Mama Gave the Soul children" proved that the Queen could even step out of her comfort zone and hang with De La Souls quirky swagger. The beat sounds as if Prince Paul sampled an old Walt Disney record. To this day dancehalls swarm when "Come Into My House" plays and it somehow never feels dated despite the fact that house songs seems a thing from the past. The slow burning "The Pro's" is an underground club banger which finds Daddy-O tapping into his reggae roots.

The Queen of Royal Badness proves why she deserves the limelight on songs like "Wrath of My Madness". Her commanding delivery is assertive and her braggadocio seems sincere and brazen at the same time. However, no other song on "All Hail The Queen" captures Queen Latifah's breakout moment better than on "Ladies First". It is considered the first feminist hip hop anthem. Monie Love and the Queen sound as one mind on this record trading righteous rhymes over a funky saxaphone melody. It even got props in the Source magazine as the 55th greatest hip hop song ever made. The album ends with two amazing reggae influenced songs in the loopy bassline of "Princess of the Posse" and the laid back jazz of "Inside Out". Without question, they were excellent choices for singles.

Back in 1989, Queen Latifah was truly bringing down the house. She never really had another record that came close to her brilliance displayed on wax here. While receiving grammys and acting awards, it is shameful that her new found fanbase has overlooked this being her best work in her collection. This is truly an excellent record that is not to be missed.

4.5 STARS............THE KID KNOWS NOT OF WHAT HE SPEAKS!!!! 5 Star Review
2007-03-08 - this album is not the best i have ever heard, but it does bump. i love THE PROS with daddy-o. i love the rawness of it. i also dig WRATH OF MY MADNESS the other raw, aggressive joints on here. that kid who dissed latifah needs to listen to his 50 cent and just forget about this because this is HIP HOP!!!! kid, this is not for you. this is for true HIP HOP HEADZ and those younguns with open minds. if this applies to you, then you will really dig this as i do........perhaps more.

The Queen Has Spoken!!!! 5 Star Review
2007-02-22 - I totally agree, this album is off the chain. Ja Rule and 50 cent wish they could be in a class of their own like the Queen...she totally rocks and while these other want-a-be and wish-they-could-be rappers will come and go...the Queen will live on forever because she has multiple talents and is the real deal. Most rappers today don't know what real music and lyrics are...if they did they wouldn't disrespect women, society and life in general but would bring positive messages to their raps like the Queen...all I can say is go ahead Queen and keep doing your thing:):)

Underrated hiphop, almost a classic.......... 4 Star Review
2006-11-01 - Latifah had all the qualities of a great female MC (flow, beats and them juggs). My personal favorite joint from her.

Top Tracks:
The Pros
King and Queen Creation
Come to Me
Ladies First
Latifah's Law
Inside Out

All Hail 5 Star Review
2006-02-22 - Queen Latifah Knows...this album was spectacular...it is uplifting and has good beats and anybody who has the nerve to even say a fool like 50 cent or a no talent joke like ja rule is anything better than her has nerve because she is history..she is what 50 and Ja bite off of...she is what they can't live up to...so know your history before you praise the present...but queen, you gotta represent!!


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