Eyes on This | |
Type: | album |
Artist: | MC Lyte |
Cover: | Eyes on This.jpg |
Recorded: | 1989 |
Genre: | Golden age hip hop |
Length: | 47:49 |
Prev Title: | Lyte as a Rock |
Prev Year: | 1988 |
Next Title: | Act Like You Know |
Next Year: | 1991 |
Eyes on This is the second studio album American hip hop recording artist MC Lyte.[1] It was released on October 3, 1989, via First Priority and Atlantic Records, and featured production from Audio Two, as well as Grand Puba, The King of Chill, Marley Marl and PMD.[2]
The album became the first by a female solo rapper to appear on the Billboard 200 (then called Billboard Top Pop Albums), on which it remained for 20 weeks, peaking 86 in November 1989.[3] It also peaking 6 on the Billboard Top Black Albums, being the first female solo rapper to break into the top 10 of that chart, as well as the highest position reached by Lyte.[4]
The lead single Cha Cha Cha reached 35 on the Billboard Hot Black Singles[5] and spent 19 weeks on the Billboard Hot Rap Singles, peaking at 1. Later, Stop, Look, Listen and Cappucino would become top 10 in the Hot Rap Singles (in 9 and 8, respectively).[6]
As on the album Lyte as a Rock, most of the songs are produced by Audio Two and King of Chill, incorporating other producers on some specific tracks. "Capuccino" was produced and co-written by Juice Crew's Marley Marl and recorded at his "House of Hits" home studio in Chestnut Ridge. "Slave 2 the Rhythm" was co-written and produced by EPMD's PMD. "I Am the Lyte" and "Funky Song" was co-written and produced by Brand Nubian's Grand Puba. For his part, Positive K, with whom Lyte had previously worked on the duet I'm Not Havin' It, has songwriting credits on the track "Rhyme Hangover."
The album addresses some social issues such as violence around drugs and addictions ("Cappucino", "Not wit' a Dealer")[7] and machismo ("Please Understand").[8] Regarding the content of Please Understand, Lyte told Deborah Gregory in an Essence profile "I’ve never let a man dog me and I never will, It’s just not gonna happen!". The track "Survival of the Fittest" is a remix by King of Chill along with Audio Two of the original included on the compilation album (1988). As the last track was included "K-Rocks Housin", a set by Lyte's disc jockey DJ K-Rock.
The diss track to Antoinette "Shut the Eff Up! (Hoe)", which was originally the b-side of the single Lyte as a Rock, was included on the album.[9] On the track "Slave 2 the Rhythm" she would say "It took a whole album for you to try and diss me/And ha-ha-ha, slum bitch, you still missed me/But yo, I'm off the dissin tip, cause that takes no creation" and would add "'Gangstress', don't make me laugh" in reference to Antoinette's nickname.[10]
"Shut the Eff Up! (Hoe)" was later sampled on TLC's Hat 2 da Back, The Lox's "Goin' Be Some Shit" and Common's "Orange Pineapple Juice". "Slave 2 the Rhythm" was sampled by Naughty by Nature on "Strike a Nerve" and by electropunk group Mindless Self Indulgence on "Tornado".
The cover photo, taken by Robert Manella, shows Lyte with her DJ K-Rock with two Porsche Carrera '89. This was taken at pier 6 of Brooklyn Bridge Park, with the World Trade Center complex of buildings visible behind them.[11]
In December 2010 the cover was included by Flavorwire in their "11 Stylish '80s Hip-Hop Album Covers" list, reviewing "MC Lyte’s hairstyle and oversized power suit haven’t necessarily aged well, but her DJ looks smooth, and there’s something ageless about lounging by a couple of Porsches before the city skyline. The soft focus adds a touch of mystery to the proceedings."[12]
In his "Consumer Guide" column in The Village Voice, critic Robert Christgau commented "backtalk like a pro, sometimes like an original --the rhythmic obscenities on the spectacularly unsisterly "Shut the Eff Up! (Hoe)" are mind-boggling. Her tales of the drug wars are tough and prowoman, and the narrative tone of "Cappucino"—part fable, part metaphor, part confessional revery, part dumb it-was-only-a-dream—is avant-garde. Elsewhere she's a pro." He also highlighted a better production compared to his debut album.[13] Rolling Stone magazine described the album as a "slamming, street-smart" endeavor. People's Michael Small considered MC Lyte on the album “maintained her reputation as an insult-hurling tough talker who rapped to hard, simple beats”.[14] For his part, Jon Pareles of The New York Times would write in his review of the album "Most of the songs continue to brag and sling insults, a gambit that can wear thin in the course of an album" although he highlighted the presence of songs like Please Understand, Not Wit 'a Dealer and Cappuccino "Even so, MC Lyte still has her ears to the street." John Leland reviewed for Spin magazine "(...) the new album is unrelentingly on, making a hard virtue of its simplicity and crudeness. In a genre that shows little patience for the vicissitudes of growing up, Lyte hangs onto her youth, battling more as a tomboy than a sexual warrior, all the while slipping into a childless world of drug dealers and casual murders."[15]
In 1999, Ego Trip's editors ranked the album 17 in their list Hip Hop's 40 Greatest Album by Year 1989 in Ego Trip's Book of Rap Lists.[16]
Alex Henderson of AllMusic commented that the album "tends to be one-dimensional lyrically -- she spends too much time bragging about how superior her rapping skills are and how inept sucker MCs are. Though it's hard not to admire the technique and strong chops she displays on such boasting fare as "Shut the Eff Up! (Hoe)" and "Slave 2 the Rhythm," she's at her best when telling some type of meaningful story." He also considered "Cappucino" the most outstanding song on the album "Were everything on the album in a class with "Cappuccino," it would have been an outstanding album instead of simply a good one."
In October 2019, on the 30th anniversary of its publication, it was reviewed by Jesse Ducker of Albumism, who commented "Eyes On This showcases Lyte's tenacity and increased confidence as an artist. Her lyrical abilities continued to improve, as she sounded even more confident . With the determination of a bulldog, she attacks each track, showing no mercy towards those who dare step to her." He would also comment on his later albums "Though Eyes On This was a success for Lyte, it was her last album where she mostly focused on emcee shit."[17]
In November 2019 HipHopDX commented on the album "The original femme fatale turned heads and reloaded her arsenal on her sophomore album with a sharp wit, thick-as-molasses funky production and inspired a generation of female rappers including her fellow Brooklynites Lil Kim, Foxy Brown, and contemporaries such as Nicki Minaj and Rapsody."[18]
In September 2020 it was reviewed by Sha Be Allah of The Source, who considered the album a "classic", described it as "Lyte’s introduction into stardom" and highlighting songs like "Cappucino," "Cha Cha Cha," and "Shut The Eff Up (Hoe)!"
The song writing information is according to the ASCAP website.[19] [20] [21]
Song title | Sample(s) | |
---|---|---|
"Cha Cha Cha" |
| |
"Slave 2 the Rhythm" | ||
"Cappucino" |
| |
"Stop, Look, Listen'" |
| |
"Throwin' Words at U" |
| |
"Not wit' a Dealer" |
| |
"Survival of the Fittest" (remix) |
| |
"Shut the Eff Up! (Hoe)" |
| |
"I Am the Lyte" |
| |
"Rhyme Hangover" |
| |
"Funky Song" |
| |
"Please Understand" |
| |
"K-Rocks Housin" |
|
Credits are taken from the liner notes.[22]