Ghetto Blaster (Push Button Objects album) explained

Ghetto Blaster
Type:studio album
Artist:Push Button Objects
Border:yes
Label:Chocolate Industries
Producer:Push Button Objects
Prev Title:Dirty Dozen
Prev Year:2000

Ghetto Blaster is a studio album by American hip hop producer Push Button Objects. It was released on Chocolate Industries in 2003. It is the follow-up to Dirty Dozen.[1]

Critical reception

Mark Pytlik of AllMusic gave the album 4 stars out of 5, calling it "an admirable reinvention that should indoctrinate [Edgar] Farinas into the new school of bleeding-edge underground hip-hop producers." Rollie Pemberton of Pitchfork gave the album a 7.2 out of 10, saying: "Surrounded by the highly polished sample fests of RJD2 and the ridiculously technical chop-a-thons of Prefuse 73, Push Button Objects is lost in the fold, regardless of his clear production prowess." Todd Hutlock of Stylus Magazine gave the album a grade of C+, writing: "Mostly, I found myself wishing that Farinas would just make separate rap and instrumental albums next time out."

It was ranked at number 19 on the CMJ "Hip-Hop 2003" chart.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: He Said, He Said. Miami New Times. Mosi. Reeves. June 5, 2003. December 12, 2017.
  2. Hip-Hop Charts 2003: The Year in Review - Hip-Hop 2003 (Covering 1/7/2003 to 12/9/2003). CMJ New Music Report. December 29, 2003. 846. 20.