Product Details
One Word Extinguisher

One Word Extinguisher
Prefuse 73

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Track Listing

  1. The Wrong Side of Reflection (Intro)
  2. The End of Biters-International
  3. Plastic featuring Diverse
  4. Uprock and Invigorate a Prefuse (produced by Dabryre)
  5. The Color of Tempo
  6. Dave's Bonus Beats
  7. Detchibe
  8. Altoid Addiction-Interlude
  9. Busy Signal (Make You Go Bombing Mix)
  10. One Word Extinguisher
  11. 90% of My Mind is With You
  12. Huevos With Jeff and Roni featuring Mr Lif on a minidisc mic
  13. Female Demands
  14. Why I Love You
  15. Southerners-Interlude
  16. Perverted Undertone
  17. Invigorate
  18. Choking You
  19. Storm Returns with Tommy Guerrero
  20. Trains on Top of the Game
  21. Styles That Fade Away With a Collonade-Reprise

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #69381 in Music
  • Released on: 2003-05-06
  • Number of discs: 1

Editorial Reviews

Album Description
Prefuse 73, also known as musical wiz kid Scott Herren, drops the highly anticipated follow up to 2001s seminal Vocal Studies and Uprock Narratives. The CD features an eclectic mix of futuristic, next-level productions. 21 tracks packaged in a Digipak. Warp Records. 2003.


Customer Reviews

From Chaos Comes Stability...5
What do you get when you meld the glitch electronica of Autechre and Aphex Twin with hip-hop? Prefuse 73. Scott Herren, otherwise known as Prefuse 73, is one of the most innovative hip-hop artists I have heard for quite some time. Along with RJD2 and DJ Shadow, Prefuse 73 is making a name for instrumental hip-hop. On One Word Extinguisher, Herren takes the tried-and-true sample formula and warps it out of proportion, creating rhythmic beats from seemingly chaotic sampling. Speech, song and various different instruments are cut-and-pasted to create a colorful collage of sound, all with very little or no use of turntables. The album cracks and flows both at the same time. "The End of Biters" comes off in the beginning as a standard rap song, but Herren unexpectedly rhythmically cuts the vocals so that they meld into the beat rather than play over it. Its a fantastic new approach to hip-hop.

Of course, there are standard rap numbers in which the several guest rappers on the album flow over Herren's fantastically original beats. "Plastic" and "Huevos" spotlight the talented raps of Diverse and Mr. Lif, respectively. Yet despite these rappers' great abilities, the instrumentation takes precident. Prefuse's beats are so alien and ahead of their time. Just like Timbaland and Dre have crafted their own distinctive hip-hop production, so has Prefuse 73. Herren's beats are something out of the pages of glitch and techno, similar to what you would hear on a Autechre, Plaid, Aphex Twin or even Mouse on Mars album. The sounds are harsh, crunchy and sharp; yet at the same time undeniably rhythmic. Several instrumental numbers emphasize this wonderful amalgam of electronica and hip-hop. "Perverted Undertone", perhaps one of the more stable tracks (it has the fewest samples and most consistent rhythm) is colorful piece sustained by a hypnotic drum loop and a continuous sample that flows backwards a la the Beatle's "Tomorrow Never Knows". "Detchibe" is another wonderful rhythmic instrumental, albeit more crunchy and sharper in its sonic texture.

"One Word Extinguisher" is both a fantastic hip-hop and electronica album. Its beats and sonic textures alone would satisfy any fan of any artists of the Warp label (Prefuse 73 happens to be on the label as well), and the skills of its several guest rappers any alternative rap lover. It's a wonderful, weird and undeniably rhythmic melding of two music worlds.

Whoa5
Regardless of what people are saying, this album can't be catergorized in any genre besides the vague and anomalous term "progressive music." I say that with full confidence that, even with the guest MCs and beat manipulation, one cannot consider this solely an instrumental, electronic hip hop album. There is simply too much going on, a musical overload across every frequency, music so coordinated and organized that it is even stifling. Going from any genre to this album (jazz, classical, even independent) is like shooting for the moon yet ending up in Mars, yet a comfortable and enjoyable trip.

An important distinction to make about One Word Extinguisher is the fact that it is a complete disc. Although certain individual tracks are astonishing, only a few of them take on song form due to the rapid changes mid-track. The listener is forced to sit and absorbe the entire record, not just for the beats but for the samples. Thus, after listening to this CD, there are very few things you'll actually remember about it because you have heard so much. Do you remember the upbeat and great cooperation on "Plastic," the fantastic song that is the title track, or do you remember the final sample on "90% Of My Mind is With You"? That is entirely up to the listener, and therefore the major reason this disc is so successful: Herren's work outshines his purpose.

To sum it up, the ingenius musicality present on this album makes it one of the albums of the year, bar none.

Wicked!!5
Prefuse's best album to date. A mesmerizing assortment of glitchy, rap and IDM infused, breakbeats.