To the 5 Boroughs

by Capitol

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Average Rating: * * * half star -
Sales Rank:34916 (lower is better)
Price as of:11/27/2008 7:13:41 PM MST
Price Used:$0.60
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Availability:Usually ships in 24 hours
Release Date:2004-06-15
Label:Capitol
UPC:724358457100
Binding:Audio CD
Published By:Capitol
ASIN:B00021LRWM
Category:Music

Tracks on To the 5 Boroughs by Capitol

  1. Ch-Check It Out
  2. Right Right Now Now
  3. 3 The Hard Way
  4. Time To Build
  5. Rhyme The Rhyme Well
  6. Triple Trouble
  7. Hey F*?# You
  8. Oh Word?
  9. That's It That's All
  10. All Life Styles
  11. Shazam!
  12. An Open Letter To NYC
  13. Crawlspace
  14. The Brouhaha
  15. We Got The

Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions

Amazon.com

There is no copy controlled software on US or UK releases of Beastie Boys' To the 5 Boroughs. The copy protection system used in Europe and other territories on select EMI/Capitol releases including To the 5 Boroughs is Macrovision's CDS-200, which sets up an audio player into the users RAM (not hard drive) to playback the Yellow book audio on the disk. None of the copy protection in CDS-200 requires software applications to be loaded onto a computer. Contrary to rumor, it does absolutely NOT install any kind of spyware onto the users system. None of the copy protection associated with CDS-200 requires software applications to be loaded onto a computer.

Beastie Boys Photos
     

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Amazon.com

The hiatus is back off, again, for the Beastie Boys, and music lovers will bob their heads with insuppressible glee. With its Nice & Smooth impersonations and shout outs to Brooklyn's Albee Square Mall, To the 5 Boroughs, their first album in six years, harkens the return of the trio to the city that made them who they are today. It's an up-tempo yet surprisingly homogenous assemblage of vintage electro-style party beats, and it's a strictly Beastie affair: the Boys co-wrote and produced each track themselves, which means that it sports none of the sonic fripperies and quirky collaborations that distinguished previous classics such as Paul's Boutique. Finally jelling after two years of on-again, off-again recording, To the 5 Boroughs will appeal to those fans old enough to remember the Licensed to Ill tour. Those old-schoolers are sure to appreciate the album's mostly off-the-cuff lyrics and minimal-to-the-extreme musical landscape--even if its stripped-down sound may leave others longing for the days when the Boys were California dreamin'. --Rebecca Levine

Customer Reviews

The Beasties Never Fail - Reviewed on 2008-10-12
* * * * *

The Beastie Boys came totally correct with this album. As one of the few artists who can create a whole new sound for themselves and still sound good, the Beastie Boys created another hip-hop masterpiece.

The production on this album is very stripped down and unique. It's clearly inspired by old school 808 beats (which we all know the Beastie Boys love). There is no heavy sampling, no heavy bass and no punk elements as you might expect. Instead we get some really catchy , up beat productions, with a truly unique sound.

The rapping is surprisingly good considering it's done by almost 40 year old white guys. The three exchange verses with ease and complement the beats perfectly. MCA sounds very raspy on the album, but it actually sounds great. Mike D is as on top of his rap game as he ever was while AdRock provides his goofy banter as usual.

If you're one of those people who's really more into the experimental funk/rock that was seen on Check Your Head and Ill Communication, this may not be the right Beastie Boys album for you. But if you're an all-around BBoys fan, you're bound to love this.
Mature - Reviewed on 2008-08-23
* * * *
1 customer found this review not to be helpful.
This album was released 6 years later after Hello Nasty. The lead single is Ch-Check it out. Triple Trouble was the 2nd single. Those two songs are their typicaly songs they did in the past. Some songs like We Got The Power is about voting a new president in. One of the members from Run DMC has a few lines on this album. It Takes Time To Build is about rebuilind New York city from 9/11 attacks. This album goes back to the old school years in the 1980's. No guitars or drums, just the dj using sound samples and their voices
This is rap - Reviewed on 2007-10-15
* * * * *

When you ask a teen today who listens to rap (which shouldn't be hard to find) and ask who is the #1 white rapper, 99.9% of the time they'll all say Eminem without thinking. Thats how MTV has raised the youth. The Beastie Boys can out rap Eminem anyday of the week. I use to love Eminem until the movie came out and he unleashed a slew of rappers upon us. I recently started listening to Beastie Boys and im floored. There rhymes are more clever then Eminems and they dont have to rap about hating there wifes, bringing along 50 friends to have rap careers, or telling people not to mess with them because they'll kill them. All in all, an amazing cd. This is rap music not the stuff you hear on the MTV or the radio. Thats all a phase, Beastie Boys will outlast and outshine all on comers.
Craptacular Copy Control - Reviewed on 2007-09-28
*
1 customer found this review helpful.

That's right, folks. This isn't a CD. It's a shiny disc that looks like a CD. However, it doesn't meet the CD specification, and you won't see 'Compact Disc' written on it anywhere.

There is no guarantee that this hunk of junk will work in any past, existing, or future equipment. For lots of people, they'll put it in their computer/car/portable CD player, and it won't play.

Don't buy this album.
An expensive drink coaster! - Reviewed on 2007-07-24
*
1 customer found this review not to be helpful.
I can't see how anyone can like this, unless flat and boring is your thing.

It's kinda funny: when Licensed To Ill was released it was the BBoys joking around and it turned into a gem. I assume they are taking themselves serious on this one, and it turned out a clunker.

How can a band have such a great string of awesome music and then release this piece of junk followed by their latest release: Mix-Up (more junk).

If the BBoys were playing baseball, they would've switched to DH long ago. Instead these guys are still starting, and at best hitting the Mendoza line.

Retire while you still have some pride, unless you think selling corny music for lots of money is cool. I don't. Some poor sap bought my trade in.
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