Van Full of Pakistans explained

Van Full of Pakistans
Type:Studio album
Artist:Y'all So Stupid
Cover:Van Full of Pakistans.jpg
Released:1993
Recorded:1992–93
Genre:Hip hop
Label:Rowdy

Van Full of Pakistans is the debut studio album by American hip hop group Y'all So Stupid. It was released in 1993 via Rowdy Records. The recording sessions took place at DARP Studios, Doppler Studios, and Bosstown Recording Studios, in Atlanta. The album was produced by member Spearhead X, who plays the narrating prank caller on every skit, Da King & I, Sylvan Sargeant, co-producers the Soul Merchants, with Dallas Austin serving as executive producer.

The album's title track peaked at No. 23 on the Bubbling Under R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.[1] Chris Applebaum directed the music video for Little Caesar Productions.[2]

Background and reception

The group was formed in 1991 when rapper H2O moved from Brooklyn to Atlanta, where he met members Unkle Buk, Sha Boogie, Spearhead X, and Logic. They were signed to Rowdy Records in late 1992. Roni Sarig, in Third Coast: Outkast, Timbaland, and How Hip-hop Became a Southern Thing, called the album "a less political, more fun-loving take on the upwardly mobile alt-rap being created by Arrested Development."[3]

The title track was ranked #96 on Complex's list of "The 100 Best Hip-Hop One Hit Wonders," in 2012.[4] LA Weekly included the album on its list of "The 5 Best Summer Rap Albums You've Probably Never Heard."[5] Fact, in its article on the most overlooked hip hop albums of the 1990s, wrote: "This is a rap album that was widely rediscovered in the early 2000s and began changing hands for impressive sums, perhaps because it’s a perfect teleportation device to a period when the music was about having fun and experimenting."[6]

Track listing

Sample credits

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. Y'all So Stupid Chart History. Billboard.
  2. 1993-03-06 . Production Notes . Billboard . 105 . 10 . 42.
  3. Book: Sarig, Roni. Third Coast: Outkast, Timbaland, and How Hip-hop Became a Southern Thing. September 7, 2007. Hachette Books. 9780306816475. Google Books.
  4. Web site: The 100 Best Hip-Hop One-Hit Wonders . Cantor . Paul . Complex . 15 May 2012.
  5. Web site: The 5 Best Summer Rap Albums You've Probably Never Heard. July 7, 2016. LA Weekly.
  6. Web site: The Most Overlooked Hip-Hop LPs of the 90s: Part 2 - Page 11 of 11. August 24, 2012.