Walk in da Park explained

Walk in da Park
Type:Album
Artist:Giggs
Cover:Walk in da park cover.jpg
Released:4 August 2008
Recorded:2008
Studio:Unit 10 Studios
Length:70:18
Label:SN1 Records
Next Title:Let Em Ave It
Next Year:2010

Walk in da Park is the debut album by English rapper Giggs. It was released on 4 August 2008 independently through SN1 Records.[1] It is Giggs' first commercial release after putting out a collection of mixtapes from 2005 onwards. The album includes guest appearances from SN1 members Joe Grind, Gunna, Kyze and Gunna D, among others. Production was handled by frequent in-house producers Boom Productions, Bayoz Muzik and others. Walk in da Park incorporates British hip hop with road rap and gangsta rap alongside aggressive flows and production.

The album entered the UK R&B Chart at number 13 and number 9 on the UK Independent Chart, selling thousands of independently-pressed copies and selling out in music stores.[2] [3] Walk in da Park was positively received by music critics.

Since its initial release, Walk in da Park has been recognised as an influential release for British hip hop, spawning the subgenre of road rap while introducing slower flows that contrasted the fast-paced grime flows that were significantly popular at the time.

Background

In 2007, Giggs released the song "Montague", leading to increased buzz for Giggs and his music. This was followed up by "Talkin' da Hardest", a freestyle over Stat Quo's song "Here We Go", produced by Dr. Dre.[4] The freestyle and its music video proved to be an underground success and became a British rap cult classic. However, neither song were included in the track listing of the album. According to Giggs, Walk in da Park was recorded and completed within two weeks.

Giggs released a video for the song "Uummm!!" for promotion before the album was released, however MTV Base refused to play the video due to claims that the content was too strong for their channel. Radio channels also banned Giggs' music from airplay.[5] In response to the bans, Giggs retracted his video application and wrote the tune "The Last Straw" Produced by Track Dealer (Track on the Beat) directed towards the bad treatment he received from MTV Base and BBC Radio 1Xtra. When asked about the issue he said he was asked to censor "drug references" from the song, despite none being made.

DJs such as Tim Westwood are known to hold this album in high regard, despite Giggs being blacklisted from BBC 1Xtra.

The underground success of the album led to Giggs signing to XL Recordings, and the release of his sophomore album Let Em Ave It (2010).

Personnel

Credits adapted from AllMusic.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Walk In Da Park [Explicit]: Giggs: MP3 Downloads |website=Amazon |date= |accessdate=2011-08-12].
  2. News: Paul Morley Showing off ... Giggs. Morley. Paul. The Guardian. 21 February 2010. 6 October 2017.
  3. Web site: Giggs – Walk in da Park. BritishHipHop. 8 August 2008. 6 October 2017.
  4. Web site: Artist profile: Giggs. MOBO Awards. 6 October 2017.
  5. Web site: Giggs' Landlord is a transatlantic triumph. Crack Magazine. 6 October 2017.
  6. Web site: Walk in Da Park – Giggs – Credits. All Music. 6 October 2017.