Check Your Head [Remastered Edition] [PA] by Beastie Boys (Vinyl, Mar-2009, 2...

Sold Date: June 3, 2014
Start Date: June 2, 2014
Final Price: $28.75 (USD)
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BRAND NEW SEALED
 brought  crashing back into the charts and into public consciousness, but that was only partially due to the album itself -- much of its initial success was due to the cult audience that cultivated in the years since its initial flop release, a group of fans whose minds were so thoroughly blown by that record, they couldn't wait to see what came next, and this helped the record debut in the Top Ten upon its April 1992 release. This audience, perhaps somewhat unsurprisingly, was a collegiate Gen-X audience raised on  and ready for  to guide them through college. As it happened,  had repositioned themselves as a lo-fi, alt-rock groove band. 
They had not abandoned rap, but it was no longer the foundation of their music, it was simply the most prominent in a thick pop-culture gumbo where old school rap sat comfortably with soul-jazz, hardcore punk, white-trash metal, arena rock, , bossa nova, spacy pop, and hard, dirty funk. What they did abandon was the psychedelic samples of , turning toward primitive grooves they played themselves, augmented by keyboardist  and co-producer . This all means that music was the message and the rhymes, which had been pushed toward the forefront on both  and , have been considerably de-emphasized (only four songs -- "Jimmy James," "Pass the Mic," "Finger Lickin' Good," and "So What'cha Want" -- could hold their own lyrically among their previous work). 
This is not a detriment, because the focus is not on the words, it's on the music, mood, and even the newfound neo-hippie political consciousness. And  is certainly a record that's greater than the sum of its parts -- individually, nearly all the tracks are good (the instrumentals sound good on their subsequent soul-jazz collection, ), but it's the context and variety of styles that give  its identity. It's how the old school raps give way to fuzz-toned rockers, furious punk, and cheerfully gritty, jazzy jams. As much as , this is a whirlwind tour through ' pop-culture obsessions, but instead of spinning into Technicolor fantasies, it's earth-bound D.I.Y. that makes it all seem equally accessible -- which is a big reason why it turned out to be an alt-rock touchstone of the '90s, something that both set trends and predicted them.