Walking With a Panther

Walking With a Panther

by LL Cool J
Walking With a Panther

Walking With a Panther

by LL Cool J

CD

$17.99 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Temporarily Out of Stock Online
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Released at a time when hip-hop's anxieties about crossover success were at a fever pitch, Walking With a Panther found LL Cool J trying to reinvent his sound while building on the commercial breakthrough of Bigger and Deffer. Even though the album succeeded on both counts, it did so in a way that didn't sit well with hip-hop purists, who began to call LL's credibility into question. Their fears about commercialism diluting the art form found a focal point in LL, the man who pioneered the rap ballad -- and there are in fact three ballads here, all of them pretty saccharine (and, tellingly, none of them singles). Apart from that, some of the concerns now seem like much ado about nothing, and there are numerous fine moments (and a few great singles) to be found on the album. It is true, though, that Walking With a Panther does end up slightly less than the sum of its parts. For one thing, it's simply too long; moreover, the force of his early recordings is missing, and there's occasionally a sense that his once-peerless technique on the mic is falling behind the times. Nonetheless, Walking With a Panther is still a fine outing on which LL proves himself a more-than-capable self-producer. The fuller, more fleshed-out sound helps keep his familiar b-boy boasts sounding fresh, and force or no force, he was in definite need of an update. On the singles -- "Going Back to Cali," "I'm That Type of Guy" (inexplicably left off All World), "Jingling Baby," and "Big Ole Butt" -- LL exudes an effortless cool; he's sly, assured, and in full command of a newfound sexual presence on record. So despite its flaws, Walking With a Panther still ranks as one of LL's stronger albums -- strong enough to make the weak moments all the more frustrating. ~ Steve Huey

Product Details

Release Date: 03/28/1995
Label: Def Jam
UPC: 0731452735522
Rank: 62815

Tracks

  1. Droppin' Em
  2. Smokin' Dopin'
  3. Fast Peg
  4. Clap Your Hands
  5. Nitro
  6. You're in My Heart
  7. I'm That Type of Guy
  8. Why Do You Think They Call It Dope?
  9. Going Back to Cali
  10. It Gets No Rougher
  11. Big Ole Butt
  12. One Shot at Love
  13. 1-900 L.L. Cool J
  14. Two Different Worlds
  15. Jealous
  16. Jingling Baby
  17. Def Jam in the Motherland
  18. Change Your Ways

Album Credits

Performance Credits

LL Cool J   Primary Artist
David Tobocman   Keyboards
Cydne Monet   Vocals
Tony "Funky Drummer" Walls   Drums
Billy Patterson   Guitar

Technical Credits

Steven Ett   Mixing,Composer,Engineer,Assistant Producer
Keith Shocklee   Composer,Producer
LL Cool J   Composer,Producer
Eric "Vietnam" Sadler   Composer,Producer,Assistant Producer
Greg Gordon   Engineer
Dennis Coffey   Composer
Rick Rubin   Composer,Producer
Kevin Reynolds   Engineer
Ricardo Betancourt   Photography
Tony Sellari   Art Direction
Chuck Valle   Assistant Engineer
James Todd Smith   Composer
Dwayne Simon   Composer
Steve Ett   Composer
Bryan Philpot   Composer,Assistant Producer
David Bianco   Engineer
Brian Latture   Composer,Assistant Producer
Dwayne "Muffla" Simon   Composer,Producer
Ferdinand Washington   Composer
Mack Davis   Composer
Howie Weinberg   Mastering
Hank Shocklee   Composer,Producer,Assistant Producer
Jay Henry   Engineer
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews