- Ultramagnetic MCs
Infobox musical artist
Name = Ultramagnetic MCs
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Background = group_or_band
Origin =New York City ,New York ,USA
Genre = Hip-Hop
Years_active =1984 –2001 2006 - present
Label =Diamond International (1984-1986)Next Plateau (1986-1991)
Mercury/PolyGram Records (1991-1992)
Wild Pitch/EMI Records (1993-1994)Tuff City (1994-?)DMAFT (2006-Present)
Associated_acts =MF911 DJ Mark the 45 King King Bee Tim Dog Godfather Don DJ Red Alert Boogie Down Productions
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Current_members =Kool Keith Ced Gee TR Love Moe Love Big D.
Past_members =Rooney Roon Ronnie T The Ultramagnetic MCs is a
hip-hop group made up ofKool Keith ,Ced Gee ,TR Love , andMoe Love .Tim Dog became an unofficial member in 1989. A former member,Rooney Roon , was fired following an assault arrest. Beat-boxing legendRahzel was also involved with the group early in its career. The group's work was associated with unorthodox sampling, polysyllabic rhymes, and bizarre lyrical imagery.History
The group formed in
1984 . Their first single was1985 's "To Give You Love" on the Diamond International label. Their worldwide buzz started with Ego Trippin', their first 12" single on Next Plateau Records in1986 which was the first rap song to feature the infamous "Synthetic Substitution" drum break sample. The song is still considered a Hip Hop classic. Their next single was "Funky/Mentally Mad", one of the most sought after 12" singles of their career. Funky was based on a Joe Cocker piano sample later used as the basis forDr. Dre andTupac 's "California Love". It was released in1987 . This led to the release of their first album.The Ultramagnetic MCs released a new school classic in
1988 , "Critical Beatdown ", introducing many new sampling techniques. Many believe that without the group's primary producer, Ced Gee, the golden era of sampling may have looked very different. Ced, while uncredited, also produced the majority ofBoogie Down Productions ' seminal "Criminal Minded ". These albums are among the first to use "chopped" samples, rearranged and edited to change context. Both albums also feature many James Brown samples, which became very prominent in Hip Hop in ensuing years.KRS-One has been quoted as saying that he was very close to joining Ultramagnetic MCs early on.Paul C. was also a major contributor to "Critical Beatdown", producing "Give The Drummer Some," and engineering most of the album. Paul C. also produced the Hip-House mix of "Traveling At The Speed Of Thought", which was used as the group's first music video, and was their sole release in 1989. The single's b-side, "A Chorus Line", became one of Ultramagnetic's most popular songs and introduced new group affiliate Tim Dog. A variation of the "A Chorus Line" instrumental was used as the basis of Tim Dog's debut single, the Ced Gee-produced "Fuck Compton", which became a modest hit and is credited with helping to spark the East coast/West coast feud of the mid '90s.The group then disappeared for several years, breaking up temporarily in
1990 . They returned onMercury Records in1992 , with the album "Funk Your Head Up ". The album received a muted response, in part because many tracks had been given a commercial sheen, having been remixed by outside producers at the label's insistence. Alternate mixes of this album's songs along with unreleased tracks from the sessions have appeared on later compilations. The song "Poppa Large", remixed byDa Beatminerz became a hit and remains a staple of Kool Keith's live show. The song's video featured Keith in a straightjacket, his bald head encased in a birdcage.1993 's "The Four Horsemen" was considered extremely strange though still brilliant, offering a darker, jazzier sound. It featured guest production and vocals byGodfather Don , who produced solo Kool Keith sessions in 1992 during another brief Ultramagnetic breakup. Some of those tracks appear on "The Four Horsemen", and also on The Cenobites LP. The former was the last official album the Ultramagnetic MCs released until their 2007 reunion.There were many semi-legitimate and compilation albums to follow, the most official of which was Next Plateau's "
The B-Sides Companion ", which featured a new song, some unreleased 1989 songs recorded for a second Next Plateau LP and most of the group's classic singles, albeit in newly remixed form. Ced Gee and Moe Love both provided demos and unreleased songs spanning the group's entire career to Tuff City for a series of four albums which were released without Kool Keith's consent. A live album, "Brooklyn To Brixton", was announced but abandoned.As a reaction to Ced and Moe's involvement in the Tuff City releases, Kool Keith and Tim Dog reunited on the album "Big Time", released under the name Ultra in 1997. Kool Keith went on to record many solo CDs, including several under aliases such as
Dr. Octagon andDr. Dooom . His abstract rhymes and syncopated, off-beat delivery influenced many rappers, includingPharoahe Monch fromOrganized Konfusion andGhostface Killah ofWu-Tang Clan .In
2001 , Ultramagnetic MCs released a single, "Make It Rain/Mix It Down" which whetted fans' appetites for a reunion album. Two other songs, "Baby, I'm Mad" and "Who Am I?" were recorded at the same sessions, but remain officially unreleased. In 2004, the original versions of the Next Plateau singles were finally released on CD as bonus tracks on the remastered "Critical Beatdown". In aDecember 9 ,2005 interview on Houston's "Late Nite Snax" radio show, Kool Keith confirmed rumours that the Ultramagnetic MCs had reformed and recorded a new album. Founding Ultramagnetic MCs member Ced Gee has set up [http://www.factshen.com/ Factshen Records] . A new Ultramagnetic MCs LP, "Back to the Future—The Bronx Kings Are Back", was scheduled to be released in2006 but was later named "The Best Kept Secret" and released January 2007. Although the album's cover features the original line-up of Kool Keith, Ced Gee, Moe Love and TR Love, TR (along with Tim Dog) is notably absent. Instead, guest verses are provided by newcomers like Grafiq Malachi Sebek. However, Tim Dog and TR Love have each recently released songs featuring Ultramagnetic under their own names. The group also released a new song after the album's release called "We About Chix", the video can be seen onYouTube .Discography
Albums
*
1988 - "Critical Beatdown "
*1992 - "Funk Your Head Up "
*1993 - "The Four Horsemen"
*1994 - "The Basement Tapes 1984–1990 "
*1996 - "New York What Is Funky "
*1996 - "Mo Love's Basement Tapes "
*1997 - "The B-Sides Companion "
*1998 - "Smack My Bitch Up"
*2007 - "The Best Kept Secret "ingles
*
1984 - "To Give You Love"/"Make You Shake"
*1986 - "Ego Trippin'"/"Ego Bits"/"Funky Potion"
*1987 - "Traveling At The Speed of Thought (Original)"/"M.C.'s Ultra (Part Two)"
*1987 - "Mentally Mad"/"Funky"
*1988 - "Watch Me Now"/"Feelin' It"
*1988 - "Ease Back"/"Kool Keith Housing Things"
*1989 - "Give The Drummer Some"/"Moe Luv Theme"
*1989 - "Traveling At The Speed Of Thought (Remixes/LP Version)"/"A Chorus Line" (featuringTim Dog )
*1991 - "Make It Happen"/"A Chorus Line (Pt. II)"
*1992 - "Poppa Large (East Coast Remix)/(West Coast Remix)"
*1993 - "Two Brothers With Checks (San Francisco Harvey)"/"One Two, One Two"
*1993 - "Raise It Up (featuringGodfather Don )"/"The Saga Of Dandy, The Devil And Day (Black Baseball)"
*1994 - "I'm Fuckin' Flippin"
*1997 - "Watch Your Back"
*2001 - "Make It Rain"/"Mix It Down"
*2006 - "Mechanism Nice (Born Twice)"/"Nottz"Appearances
*
1987 - "Red Alert Goes Berzerk"
*1994 - "Wild Pitch Classics"
*1999 - "It's All The Way Live" appears on a compilation, called ConnectedExternal links
* [http://www.koolkeith.co.uk/ Kool Keith's website]
* [http://www.ultrakeith.net/ www.ultrakeith.net]
* [http://www.Tuffcity.com/ www.Tuffcity.com]
* [http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/ultramagneticmcs/ Rollingstone page]
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