fbpx
Wikipedia

The Ecstatic

The Ecstatic is the fourth studio album by American rapper Mos Def, released on June 9, 2009, by the independent record label Downtown Records. After venturing further away from hip hop with an acting career and two poorly received albums, Mos Def signed a recording contract with Downtown and recorded The Ecstatic primarily at the Record Plant in Los Angeles. He worked with producers such as Preservation, Mr. Flash, Oh No, and Madlib, with the latter two reusing instrumentals they had produced on Stones Throw Records. The work of Stones Throw rapper MF Doom was also cited by Mos Def as an influence, while singer Georgia Anne Muldrow, formerly of the record label, performed as one of the album's few guest vocalists, along with rappers Slick Rick and Talib Kweli.

The Ecstatic
Studio album by
ReleasedJune 9, 2009
Studio
Genre
Length45:34
LabelDowntown
Producer
Mos Def chronology
True Magic
(2006)
The Ecstatic
(2009)
December 99th
(2016)
Singles from The Ecstatic
  1. "Life in Marvelous Times"
    Released: November 4, 2008
  2. "Quiet Dog Bite Hard"
    Released: January 13, 2009
  3. "Casa Bey"
    Released: May 26, 2009

Described by music journalists as a conscious and alternative hip hop record, The Ecstatic features an eccentric, internationalist quality. Mos Def's raps about global politics, love, war, spirituality, and social conditions are informed by the zeitgeist of the late 2000s, Black internationalism, and Pan-Islamic ideas, incorporating a number of Islamic references throughout the album. Its loosely structured, lightly reverbed songs use unconventional time signatures and samples taken from a variety of international musical styles, including Afrobeat, soul, Eurodance, jazz, reggae, Latin, and Middle Eastern music. Mos Def titled the album after one of his favorite novels, Victor LaValle's The Ecstatic (2002), believing its titular phrase evoked his singular musical vision. For the album's front cover, a still from Charles Burnett's 1978 film Killer of Sheep was reproduced in red tint.

The Ecstatic charted at number nine on the Billboard 200 in its first week of release and eventually sold 168,000 copies. Its sales benefited from its presence on Internet blogs and the release of a T-shirt illustrating the record's packaging alongside a label printed with a code redeemable for a free download of the album. To further support the album, Mos Def embarked on an international tour with concerts in North America, Japan, Australia, and the United Kingdom between August 2009 and April 2010. As his DJ on the tour, Preservation began to develop remixes of the album's songs, which he later released on the remix album The REcstatic in 2013.

A widespread critical success, The Ecstatic was viewed as a return to form for Mos Def and one of the best albums from 2009, with reviewers applauding its exuberant musical feel, adventurous creative range, and shrewd lyrical performances. Some publications ranked it among the greatest albums of the 2000s decade, including The Times at number 30. However, it struggled to reach mainstream audiences beyond Mos Def's fan base and led the already disillusioned rapper further away from the music industry, resulting in less recorded work from him over subsequent years.

Background edit

By the mid 2000s, Mos Def had established himself as one of hip hop music's leading auteurs with records that sold millions of copies while realizing a pan-African worldview, although the rapper grew increasingly wary of the music industry.[1] In 2006, his third album True Magic was released haphazardly by Geffen Records to fulfill a contractual obligation while he was devoting more time to his acting career.[2] The quality of the album, along with his repeated ventures away from recording hip hop, left "some fans wondering if Mos Def's acting accomplishments were finally affecting his music", PopMatters critic Quentin B. Huff chronicles.[3] Speaking with Spank Rock for Interview magazine, Mos Def expressed a jadedness with the commodifying aspect of the hip hop industry and elucidated his artistic goals at the time:

You have to get busy. There are so many things ... I can't control what people think. I'm not trying to manipulate people's thoughts or sentiments. I write all the time. You have to experience life, make observations, ask questions ... I come to uplift the people. It doesn't have to be fashionable. I don't mind being black. I'm black out loud. It's more than the people that they are, it's the condition that they represent. I don't hate nobody. I hate certain conditions that are inflicted upon the people—and they're helpless with it. To me the job of an artist is to provide a useful and intelligent vocabulary for the world to be able to articulate feelings they experience every day.[4]

After his tenure on Geffen ended, Mos Def signed a record deal with the independent label Downtown Records and proceeded to record The Ecstatic as his first album for the label.[5]

Recording and production edit

 
Mos Def in 2008

Mos Def recorded most of the album in sessions at the Record Plant in Los Angeles. The songs "Twilight Speedball", "No Hay Nada Mas", and "Roses" were partially recorded at Hovercraft Studios in Virginia Beach, Someothaship Connect in Los Angeles, and New York City's Downtown Music Studios.[6] He worked with producers Mr. Flash, Oh No, Madlib, and Preservation, who previously produced some of True Magic's songs. For The Ecstatic, Oh No reused some of his productions from his 2007 album Dr. No's Oxperiment, while Madlib incorporated samples from his Beat Konducta in India (2007) record. For "Life in Marvelous Times", Mr. Flash reused the beat from "Champions" – his 2006 collaboration with the French hip hop group TTC – while "History" used a beat produced by J Dilla before his death.[7]

With Preservation, Mos Def produced "Casa Bey" after a 2006 trip to Rio de Janeiro, where local rapper MV Bill introduced him to the music of Banda Black Rio.[8][nb 1] Mos Def and Preservation altered one of the band's songs – "Casa Forte", an instrumental featuring their characteristic blend of funk, jazz, soul, and Brazilian rhythms – and used it as the beat.[8] The original song title – meaning "strong house" in Portuguese – was changed to "Casa Bey"; Bey was Mos Def's family surname. According to him, he tried to enlist rappers Jay Electronica, Black Thought, and Trugoy for the song, but they all found it too difficult to rap over the instrumental.[4]

The recording sessions featured collaborations with singer Georgia Anne Muldrow and rappers Slick Rick and Talib Kweli – Mos Def's partner in the rap duo Black Star.[10] Muldrow sang and played piano on "Roses", which she originally wrote and recorded in 2008 for her album Umsindo (2009). She said Mos Def "borrowed" the song for The Ecstatic after they met through a mutual friend. "They came over one day and started playing 'Roses.' He was singing the song and knew it. He said 'I wanna grab that.' I said, 'Man, I already got this as a single'. He just wanted that song. He snatched it up real quick", she recalled in laughter.[11]

Along with Madlib, Oh No, and J Dilla, Muldrow had been an affiliate of Stones Throw Records; according to journalist Nathan Rabin, they collectively produced half of the album, lending its sound a "sympathetic" quality.[12] During the recording, Mos Def was also influenced by fellow rapper MF Doom, at one point improvising raps from the latter's 2004 album Mm..Food while in the studio. "He rhymes as weird as I feel", he said of Doom, citing his Madlib collaboration Madvillainy (2004) as well.[13] With The Ecstatic, Mos Def said he wanted to offer listeners sincere, uninhibited observations about life and love, "some truth and positive heart lift", without the need for club songs. "No disrespect to [the club]".[14]

Music and lyrics edit

The Ecstatic covers an international range of styles in a very loose and extemporaneous manner, held together by what Rabin describes as "a lyrical and sonic fascination with life beyond the Western World".[16] According to Robert Christgau, the songs average two-and-a-half minutes and segue into one another without resolution, giving it the feel of a globally influenced hip hop mixtape "with poles in Brooklyn and Beirut".[17] The music reflects Mos Def's varied interests in jazz, poetry, Eastern rhythms, psychedelia, Spanish music, and the blues.[18] The tracks on the first half are, as The Observer's Ben Thompson describes, "predominantly Eastward-looking", while the second half indulges more in Latin and reggae influences.[19] Other sounds sampled or explored include Afrobeat ("Quiet Dog Bite Hard"), Eurodance ("Life in Marvelous Times"), Bollywood ("Supermagic"), and Philadelphia soul.[20] "Supermagic" also draws on elements from Turkish acid rock and Mary Poppins, while on "No Hay Nada Mas", Mos Def sings and raps in Spanish over a flamenco-influenced production.[21] He sings elsewhere on the album, often breaking into sing-song vamps during his raps.[22] Along with his singing, the often sample-based music is unconventional in its use of what Preservation calls unusual time signatures and "awkward" breakdowns.[23]

 
US marines in Baghdad during Operation Iraqi Freedom, April 2003. The album features criticism of the Iraq War.[24]

According to The Independent's Simmy Richman, The Ecstatic's Eastern-influenced musical backdrop is reflective of Mos Def's "post-War on Terror" themes. Richman calls it a conscious rap record, and No Ripcord's Ryan Faughnder regards it as "socially conscious alternative hip-hop".[25] African-American studies and media scholar Sohail Daulatzai believes the album is informed by Black internationalist politics and Pan-Islamic ideas, while State magazine's Niall Byrne says it explores the theme of international relations on songs such as the Middle Eastern-influenced "The Embassy" and "Auditorium", which features an Iraq-themed guest rap by Slick Rick.[26] On "The Embassy", Mos Def raps from the perspective of an outsider about the lifestyle of an ambassador at a luxury hotel, while the opening song "Supermagic" critiques government treatment of minority groups.[27] Mos Def incorporates a number of Islamic references throughout the album, including samples of American Muslim activist Malcolm X, Turkish protest singer Selda Bağcan, and an Arab-language scene from the 1966 film The Battle of Algiers; additionally, the track "Wahid" is titled after the Arabic word for "oneness".[28]

You're living at a time of extremism, a time of revolution, a time when there's got to be a change. People in power have misused it. And now there has to be a change and a better world has to be built and the only way it's going to be built is with extreme methods. And I, for one, will join in with anyone. I don't care what color you are, as long as you want to change this miserable condition that exists on this earth. Thank you.

— 1964 Malcolm X speech sampled for the beginning of the album[29]

As on Mos Def's other albums, he speaks a dedication to God in Arabic ("Bismillah ar-Rahman ar-Raheem") at the start of The Ecstatic. This leads into "Supermagic" and its opening sample of Malcolm X's 1964 speech at Oxford Union.[30] The sample prefaces the album's "small-globe statement", as Pitchfork journalist Nate Patrin explains, saying it indicates that Mos Def has "a stake in something greater than just one corner of the rap world".[7] Alex Young from Consequence of Sound believes the speech introduces "a political album encompassing global beats and viewpoints".[31] According to The Washington Post critic Allison Stewart, Mos Def seems equally interested in the Obama-era zeitgeist as in accounts of the past, such as the early-1980s Bedford–Stuyvesant setting of "Life in Marvelous Times".[18] Young deems the song anthemic for "a seemingly paradoxical age that routinely sees events such as a Black man being elected president of a nation wallowing in racial inequality".[31] From Christgau's perspective, Mos Def offers a credo in the lyrics: "More of less than ever before / It's just too much more for your mind to absorb / It's scary like hell, but there's no doubt / We can't be alive in no time but now".[17]

Throughout The Ecstatic, Mos Def alternates between what AllMusic's Andy Kellman calls nonsensical yet intellectual raps and "seemingly nonchalant, off-the-cuff boasts", set against eccentric, lightly reverbed productions.[32] According to The Guardian's Paul MacInnes, The Ecstatic features his characteristically "fragmented lyrical style, which loops words within phrases and plays on sound as much as meaning".[33] "Auditorium" showcases his "complex and convoluted" lyricism delivered closely in rhythm with the beat, Patrin says, citing the lines "soul is the lion's roar, voice is the siren / I swing 'round, wring out and bring down the tyrant / chop a small axe and knock a giant lopsided".[7] He explores Afrocentric themes on "Revelations" and compares love to a gunfight on "Pistola". On "Roses", Muldrow sings nature-friendly lyrics about drawing flowers in times of sadness rather than plucking them from the ground. "Roses is about creativity and human capacity", she explains. "A lot of times Western society makes [women] base our sense of worth on 'diamonds are forever' or 'a dozen roses' and that's how you prove your love to somebody … but you receive so many gifts and still feel empty. So draw them and let the roses come from inside."[11]

Title and packaging edit

 
Attendees of the 1928 Moorish Science Temple Conclave; the photo was used for the album's back cover.

The Ecstatic was titled after Victor LaValle's 2002 dark humor novel.[34] One of Mos Def's favorite novels, it was written about an overweight college dropout who fell into mental illness while living with his eccentric family in Queens, New York.[35] According to Mos Def, the phrase "the ecstatic" was "used in the 17th and 18th centuries to describe people who were either mad or divinely inspired and consequently dismissed as kooks".[34] The phrase resonated with him, as he believed no one else in hip hop had ever recorded an album like The Ecstatic. "I feel like I was the only person who was capable of making this type of music in this type of way", he claimed. "I don't rap like nobody, I don't try to sound like nobody."[36] He said "the ecstatic" also refers to "a type of devotional energy, an impossible dream that becomes reality but is discredited before it's realized. The airplane, a nutty idea. The telephone, the Internet. People who envisioned those were considered radical or extreme."[34]

The Ecstatic was packaged with few liner notes and a two-sheet booklet featuring a photo of Mos Def taken using the Photo Booth software application.[37] The front cover photo reproduced a still in red tint from Killer of Sheep, a low-budget 1978 film by Charles Burnett about African-American life in 1970s Watts, Los Angeles.[38] According to Dale Eisinger from Complex, the "subtle and still-moving" photo reflects the ideas of cultural justice and global inequality present throughout Mos Def's career while capturing the "sonic construction" of The Ecstatic's music. "The cover has hazy, dream-like movement", Eisinger said, "appearing as a non-narrative, loose collection of vignettes that are tangentially fascinating and incredibly powerful."[39] For the back cover, a 1928 photo of the Moorish Science Temple gathering in Chicago was used, which Daulatzai interpreted as another element of Mos Def's "Pan-Islamic mashup" on the album.[28]

Marketing and sales edit

 
Mos Def performing at the New Parish in Oakland, October 2009

The Ecstatic was released by Downtown on June 9, 2009.[40] In its first week, the album sold 39,000 copies and debuted at number nine on the Billboard 200, becoming the second record of Mos Def's career to reach the top 10 on the chart.[41] The following week, he became the first recording artist to endorse the Original Music Tee, a T-shirt featuring the album cover on the front, the track listing on the back, and a tag with a code to download an MP3 copy of the record.[42] The marketing strategy led to enough sales that Billboard factored the T-shirts as album units on the magazine's music charts.[43] The Ecstatic also benefited from the number of mentions it received on Internet blog posts, which peaked during the week of June 29.[44] The album reached 168,000 copies sold in March 2014.[45]

Three singles were released to promote the album: "Life in Marvelous Times" on November 4, 2008; "Quiet Dog Bite Hard" on January 13, 2009; and "Casa Bey" on May 26.[46] According to Charles Aaron, "Life in Marvelous Times" was the "most powerful and accessible song" Mos Def had ever recorded, but it could not even manage to receive airplay on radio stations in his native New York. "If [it] can't get on the radio, then I don't need to be on the radio", the rapper said in August, expressing a wavering interest in reaching mainstream audiences.[47]

Mos Def supported the album further with an international tour, which began its North American leg in early August 2009. This stretch of concerts spanned a number of US and Canadian cities, including Chicago, Miami, Washington D.C., Miami, Portland, Calgary, and Vancouver. Jay Electronica performed as his opening act, and certain shows were co-headlined with Kweli and singer Erykah Badu.[48] The leg concluded on October 3 with an evening performance slot at the Austin City Limits Music Festival.[49] Mos Def continued touring into the following year, playing a series of concerts in Japan during late 2009, which were documented in an episode of the Current TV series Embedded. This was followed by his first headlining tour of Australia in January 2010 and a short series of April concerts in the United Kingdom.[50]

Critical reception edit

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
AnyDecentMusic?7.7/10[51]
Metacritic81/100[40]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [32]
Entertainment WeeklyB+[52]
The Guardian     [33]
The Irish Times     [53]
MSN Music (Consumer Guide)A[17]
Pitchfork8.0/10[7]
Rolling Stone     [54]
Spin9/10[55]
The Times     [56]
USA Today    [57]

The Ecstatic was met with widespread critical acclaim.[40] After two poorly received records by Mos Def, it was viewed by critics as a return to the form of his 1999 debut album Black on Both Sides, earning some of the best reviews of his career.[58] At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from professional publications, The Ecstatic received an average score of 81, based on 28 reviews.[40] Aggregator AnyDecentMusic? gave it 7.7 out of 10, based on their assessment of the critical consensus.[51]

In The New Yorker, The Ecstatic was hailed as Mos Def's "most conceptually knotty and ambitious work", while Aaron wrote in Spin that the "internationalist return to form" is also "perhaps his liveliest work".[59] For The Irish Times, Jim Carroll said the rapper has not performed this engagingly or skillfully since his career beginnings, highlighting especially "Supermagic" and "Life in Marvelous Times".[53] Mick Middles from The Quietus appraised it as "the joyful sound of a rampant artist, unrestrained by expectation or commercialism", with free-flowing music that escapes the boundaries his previous albums had merely pushed.[60] Ben Thompson, in The Observer, believed the diverse range of samples make it "a crate-digger's wet dream" and "a thrillingly accessible demonstration of hip-hop's limitless creative possibilities" to a layperson.[19] Writing for MSN Music, Christgau felt the songs are "devoid of hooks but full of sounds you want to hear again", along with "thoughtfully slurred" yet intelligible lyrics by Mos Def, whose creative vision warrants the introductory Malcolm X sample.[17] In the opinion of Time's Josh Tyrangiel, his political meditations may not appeal to conservatives but are rich in "the rhythm, exuberance and wit Mos Def showed on his early records".[61] Steve Jones of USA Today said his reflections on politics, love, religion, and societal conditions are full of insight and sincerity while calling the album his strongest effort.[57]

Some reviewers were less impressed. Rolling Stone critic Christian Hoard found the quality of the songs inconsistent, while Slant Magazine's Eric Henderson claimed much of the music lacks song structure and "careen[s] wildly, free from the constraints of chorus and verse".[62] Margaret Wappler evaluated the record with qualified praise in the Los Angeles Times, saying it "mostly lives up to its giddy name" but wanes occasionally while the artful samples may challenge listeners at first.[63]

At the end of 2009, The Ecstatic was named one of the year's 10 best albums.[64] It was ranked 30th by The Guardian,[65] 24th by Q,[66] 23rd by Slant Magazine,[67] 17th by Rolling Stone,[68] 16th by Sputnikmusic,[69] 15th by PopMatters,[70] 10th by Relevant,[71] 7th by Spin,[72] and 3rd by eMusic;[73] About.com and BBC Music both named it the year's best rap record.[74][75] In The Village Voice's Pazz & Jop – an annual poll of American critics nationwide – The Ecstatic was voted the 11th best album of 2009.[76] Christgau, the poll's creator, ranked it 12th on his own year-end list for The Barnes & Noble Review.[77] The Times placed it at number 30 on the newspaper's decade-end list of the 100 greatest records from the 2000s.[78] It finished at numbers 27 and 155 on similar lists published by Rhapsody and Rock's Backpages, respectively.[79][80] The Ecstatic also earned Mos Def nominations for the 52nd Annual Grammy Awards (2010) in the categories of Best Rap Album and Best Rap Solo Performance (for "Casa Bey").[81] However, he lost in both categories to Eminem's Relapse (2009) and Jay-Z's "D.O.A. (Death of Auto-Tune)" (2009), respectively.[13]

Photo exhibition edit

Between January 30 and February 6, 2010, the HVW8 Art & Design Gallery in Los Angeles held an exclusive one-week exhibition titled "Mos Def: Ecstatic Moments – Photographs". It showcased a collection of photos taken by Cognito – a longtime hip hop documentarian and colleague of Mos Def – capturing the rapper during the two years spent making and promoting The Ecstatic. Included in the exhibition were candid photographs of him in the studio with the album's producers, and photos of his experiences visiting and touring locations around the world, including the Cape of Good Hope and São Paulo. A series of "posse shots" taken at the end of concerts from the American tour were also displayed, showing the rapper with Jay Electronica, Kweli, Badu, and musician Shuggie Otis, who made an unexpected appearance during the tour.[64]

The timing of the exhibition was meant to capitalize on Mos Def's two nominations for the Grammy Awards, which were being held that week. "I thought it was a perfect time to honor his presence while he's here", Cognito explained. "We've had a lot of our greats pass away in the past couple of years, be it Dilla or Bataan [sic], or whoever, and now everybody wants to talk 'Dilla Dilla Dilla' or whatever, but you weren't saying that while he was alive. Let's praise our heroes while they're alive."[82]

Remix album edit

 
Preservation in 2007

While on tour as Mos Def's in-concert DJ, Preservation began to remix some of The Ecstatic's songs for their live routine. He challenged himself to remix the rest of the album as The REcstatic, taking more than a year and working with Jan Fairchild – the original record's mixing engineer.[83] Preservation revisited sources for the original beats to find similar recordings that would correspond to each song's particular aesthetic while preserving Mos Def's vocals for the remixes.[84] He wanted them to be sample-based and consistent in key, pitch, and tone to the original album, which he found difficult to achieve because of its unorthodox instrumentals and singing. "It's the result of countless hours of digging through records to sample", he recalled. "Constructing the beat, wrapping it around the vocal, adjusting the tempo, and so on".[84] "Black Fantastic" – an outtake produced by Minnesota during The Ecstatic's recording – replaced "Casa Bey" in the final track listing, as Preservation had found the tempo and structure of the original song too difficult to make a satisfactory remix.[23]

The REcstatic was released as a free download on June 12, 2013, by Preservation's imprint label, Mon Dieu Music.[23] Reviewing the remix album in Tiny Mix Tapes, Samuel Diamond said the rapturous energy of the original record was given a "slightly rougher texture" on what he deemed "a respectful contribution to the canon of remix-based art, something that can be said for very few modern rap 'remixes'".[85]

Aftermath and legacy edit

It's machine-like how things are run now in hip-hop, and my ambitions are different. I'm not knocking it, but I have my mind on another type of prize. There's another way to achieve that [success] too. There's another way with less congestion, less emissions. I've been spending my time building that road. You have to look for validation from yourself. Who wants to be the outcast? But you have to commit to who you are. Also, a lot of it is the manifestation of society and colonialism in the industry. Radiohead can be as avant-garde as they want and still have pop success, but if you're black you have to surrender yourself to the flashing lights.

— Mos Def speaking on his disillusionment while promoting The Ecstatic[86]

Despite The Ecstatic's success with fans and critics, Mos Def remained disillusioned with the music industry and "moved on creatively", according to Yardbarker journalist Evan Sawdey.[87] Changing his name to Yasiin Bey, the rapper recorded sporadically during the 2010s, appearing on songs by other hip hop artists such as ASAP Rocky, Ski Beatz, Currensy, and Kanye West.[88] Meanwhile, he received media coverage for largely nonmusical ventures and incidents, including a torture reenactment filmed in protest of the Guantanamo Bay detention camp and an illegal residence in Cape Town, South Africa, where he was detained for almost one year after trying to leave the country using a World Passport.[86] In 2013, Beats Per Minute named The Ecstatic as the 112th best album of the past five years.[89]

In 2015, the rapper went to London for recording sessions that would produce his next album Negus, using raps he had written during the previous few years.[90] The following year, he announced on West's website that he was retiring from both the music and film industries, although he promised a few more collaborative recordings and one more solo album.[86] Despite the 2016 Ferrari Sheppard collaboration December 99th, Albumism writer Jesse Ducker regards The Ecstatic as his "last hurrah" and "the last album I acknowledge that he released", as well as a reminder "that when [he] gives a shit, he's still as good as anyone at recording music." Ducker adds that its music should have won both Grammy Awards for which it was nominated in 2010.[13]

After private presentations at art fairs in Morocco, Dubai, and Hong Kong, the rapper's next work Negus in Natural Person (or simply Negus) premiered to the public on November 15, 2019, as a "listening installation" at the Brooklyn Museum in New York. Billed as an homage to public figures who "led noble lives" such as Prince Alemayehu, Henrietta Lacks, and Nipsey Hussle, the exhibit was open for 10 weeks and featured the 28-minute musical album playable with on-ear wireless headphones given to attendees, alongside a visual artwork installation designed by the rapper, José Parlá, Julie Mehretu, and Ala Ebtekar. However, the album went unreleased outside of the exhibit, which itself was largely ignored by the hip hop community.[86] That same month, Vibe reported that The Ecstatic had been withdrawn from streaming services. "The ownership of that album has come out of the hands of the corporation that owned it, previously. That's why it's not there anymore", the rapper explained. "But there's still opportunities for people to hear it in other mediums, and the team is putting those things together."[90]

Track listing edit

Credits are adapted from Downtown Music.[6]

The Ecstatic track listing
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Supermagic"Dante Smith, Michael JacksonOh No2:32
2."Twilite Speedball"Smith, Chad HugoThe Neptunes, Mos Def3:02
3."Auditorium" (featuring Slick Rick)Smith, Otis Jackson Jr., Richard WaltersMadlib, Mos Def4:34
4."Wahid"Smith, O. JacksonMadlib1:39
5."Priority"Smith, Jean DavalPreservation1:22
6."Quiet Dog Bite Hard"Smith, DavalPreservation2:57
7."Life in Marvelous Times"Smith, Gilles BousquetMr. Flash3:41
8."The Embassy"Smith, Bousquet, Ihsan al MunzerMr. Flash, Mos Def2:45
9."No Hay Nada Mas"Smith, DavalPreservation1:42
10."Pistola"Smith, M. Jackson, Anthony HesterOh No3:02
11."Pretty Dancer"Smith, O. JacksonMadlib3:31
12."Workers Comp."Smith, Bousquet, Marvin GayeMr. Flash2:02
13."Revelations"Smith, O. Jackson, Michael DrakeMadlib2:03
14."Roses" (featuring Georgia Anne Muldrow)Smith, Georgia Anne MuldrowGeorgia Anne Muldrow3:41
15."History" (featuring Talib Kweli)Smith, James Yancey, Talib K. Greene, Zekkariyas, Mary Wells WomackJ Dilla2:21
16."Casa Bey"Smith, Eduardo LoboPreservation, Mos Def[nb 2]4:32

Sample credits

  • "Supermagic" contains a sample of "Ince Ince" by Selda Bağcan.
  • "Priority" contains elements from "Flower" by Bobby Hebb.
  • "Quiet Dog Bite Hard" contains portions of an interview with Fela Kuti from the documentary film Music Is the Weapon.
  • "The Embassy" contains a sample of "The Joy of Lina" by Ihsan al Munzer.
  • "Pistola" contains elements from "In the Rain" by Billy Wooten.
  • "Workers Comp." contains a sample of "If This World Were Mine" by Marvin Gaye.
  • "Revelations" contains portions of "Colours" by Michael Drake.
  • "History" contains a sample of "Two Lovers History" by Mary Wells.
  • "Casa Bey" contains a sample of "Casa Forte" by Banda Black Rio.

Personnel edit

Credits are adapted from Downtown Music.[6]

  • Fernando Aponte – engineering
  • Danny Betancourt – engineering
  • Josh Blair – additional vocal engineering
  • Matt De Sando – additional vocal engineering
  • Sayyd Droullard – additional engineering
  • Jan Fairchild – engineering, mixing
  • Josh Grant – additional engineering
  • Bernie Grundman – mastering
  • Zach Hancock – additional engineering
  • Myron Kingsbury – assistant engineering
  • Talib Kweli – vocals
  • Georgia Anne Muldrow – engineering, piano, production, vocals
  • The Neptunes – production
  • Madlib – production
  • Mos Def – arrangement, production, vocals
  • Mr. Flash – production
  • Oh No – production
  • Preservation – arrangement, production
  • Slick Rick – vocals
  • Ben Yonas – additional vocal engineering

Charts edit

Weekly charts edit

Chart performance for The Ecstatic
Chart (2009) Peak
position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[92] 91
Canadian Albums (Billboard)[32] 24
French Albums (SNEP)[93] 172
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[93] 90
US Billboard 200[32] 9
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[32] 5

Year-end charts edit

2009 year-end chart performance for The Ecstatic
Chart (2009) Position
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[94] 98

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ According to Nate Patrin of Pitchfork, it is rumoured that Mos Def was in South America at the time scouting shooting locations for The Brazilian Job – the purported sequel to the 2003 film The Italian Job (in which he had starred) – "before it got caught up in development hell".[9]
  2. ^ No producers are listed for "Casa Bey" in the official album credits, although DJBooth reported that Preservation and Mos Def had produced the song.[91]

References edit

  1. ^ Sundaresan 2020; Sawdey 2021.
  2. ^ Samuel 2009; Huff 2009.
  3. ^ Huff 2009.
  4. ^ a b Anon. 2009a.
  5. ^ Samuel 2009; Sundaresan 2020.
  6. ^ a b c Anon.(f) n.d.
  7. ^ a b c d Patrin 2009b.
  8. ^ a b Spadine 2009.
  9. ^ Patrin 2009a.
  10. ^ Anon.(h) n.d.; Jones 2009.
  11. ^ a b Anon. 2009b.
  12. ^ Rabin 2009.
  13. ^ a b c Ducker 2019.
  14. ^ Anon. 2009a; Gundersen 2009.
  15. ^ Slavik 2009.
  16. ^ Patrin 2009b; Rabin 2009.
  17. ^ a b c d Christgau 2009.
  18. ^ a b Stewart 2009.
  19. ^ a b Thompson 2009.
  20. ^ Kot 2009; Patrin 2009b; Kellman n.d..
  21. ^ Kot 2009; Patrin 2009b; Stewart 2009.
  22. ^ Kot 2009; Patrin 2009b.
  23. ^ a b c Balfour 2013.
  24. ^ Iles 2009.
  25. ^ Richman 2009; Faughnder 2009.
  26. ^ Daulatzai 2012, p. 132; Byrne 2009.
  27. ^ Christgau 2009; Byrne 2009; Anon. 2015.
  28. ^ a b Daulatzai 2012, p. 132.
  29. ^ Anon. 2015.
  30. ^ Daulatzai 2012, p. 132; St. John 2009; Patrin 2009b.
  31. ^ a b Young 2009.
  32. ^ a b c d e Kellman n.d.
  33. ^ a b MacInnes 2009.
  34. ^ a b c Gundersen 2009.
  35. ^ Samuel 2009; Gundersen 2009.
  36. ^ Gundersen 2009; Anon. 2009a.
  37. ^ Raible 2009.
  38. ^ Patrin 2009b; Eisinger 2013.
  39. ^ Eisinger 2013.
  40. ^ a b c d Anon.(h) n.d.
  41. ^ Anon.(h) n.d.; Caulfield 2009.
  42. ^ Michaels 2009.
  43. ^ Owsinski 2009, p. 70.
  44. ^ Siehndel et al. 2013, p. 279.
  45. ^ Baker 2014.
  46. ^ Samuel 2008; Anon.(d) n.d.; Anon.(c) n.d..
  47. ^ Aaron 2009, p. 78.
  48. ^ Dantana 2009.
  49. ^ Keyes 2009.
  50. ^ Murray 2010; Maness 2009; Anon. 2010a.
  51. ^ a b Anon.(e) n.d.
  52. ^ Vozick-Levinson 2009.
  53. ^ a b Carroll 2009.
  54. ^ Hoard 2009.
  55. ^ Aaron 2009, p. 80.
  56. ^ Potton 2009.
  57. ^ a b Jones 2009.
  58. ^ Huff 2009; Bronson 2009.
  59. ^ Anon. 2016; Aaron 2009, p. 80
  60. ^ Middles 2009.
  61. ^ Tyrangiel 2009.
  62. ^ Henderson 2009; Hoard 2009.
  63. ^ Wappler 2009.
  64. ^ a b Anon. 2010b.
  65. ^ Anon. 2009c.
  66. ^ Stosuy 2009.
  67. ^ Anon. 2009e.
  68. ^ Anon. 2009d.
  69. ^ Anon. 2009i.
  70. ^ Anon. 2009f.
  71. ^ Anon. 2009g.
  72. ^ Fennessey 2010.
  73. ^ Anon. 2009h.
  74. ^ Anon.(a) n.d.
  75. ^ Diver 2010.
  76. ^ Anon. 2009j.
  77. ^ Christgau 2010.
  78. ^ Anon. 2009l.
  79. ^ Chennault 2009.
  80. ^ Anon. 2009k.
  81. ^ Harling 2009.
  82. ^ Ford 2010.
  83. ^ Balfour 2013; Lamb 2013.
  84. ^ a b Lamb 2013.
  85. ^ Diamond 2013.
  86. ^ a b c d Sundaresan 2020.
  87. ^ Ducker 2019; Sawdey 2021.
  88. ^ Sundaresan 2020; Ducker 2019.
  89. ^ Zercoe 2013.
  90. ^ a b Ketchum III 2019.
  91. ^ Anon.(f) n.d.; Spadine 2009.
  92. ^ Anon.(i) n.d.
  93. ^ a b Anon.(g) n.d.
  94. ^ Anon.(j) n.d.

Bibliography edit

  • Aaron, Charles (2009). "The SPIN Interview: Mos Def". Spin. Vol. 25, no. 8.
  • Anon. (2009a). "House Music: Mos Def". Interview. from the original on September 13, 2016. Retrieved June 13, 2016.
  • Anon. (2009b). "Mos Def Clips 'Roses' From Up-And-Coming Singer". The Urban Daily. from the original on July 1, 2016. Retrieved June 4, 2016.
  • Anon. (2009c). "Critics' poll 2009: Albums 11 - 50". The Guardian. Retrieved May 13, 2024.
  • Anon. (2009d). . Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on March 23, 2010. Retrieved May 13, 2024.
  • Anon. (2009e). "The 25 Best Albums & Singles of 2009". Slant Magazine. Retrieved May 13, 2024.
  • Anon. (2009f). "The 60 Best Albums of 2009". PopMatters. Retrieved May 13, 2024.
  • Anon. (2009g). . Relevant. Archived from the original on February 17, 2010. Retrieved May 13, 2024.
  • Anon. (2009h). . eMusic. Archived from the original on January 7, 2010. Retrieved May 13, 2024.
  • Anon. (2009i). "Staff Picks: Top Albums of 2009". Sputnikmusic. Retrieved May 13, 2024.
  • Anon. (2009j). . The Village Voice. Archived from the original on February 19, 2010. Retrieved May 13, 2024.
  • Anon. (2009k). "Very Noughtie: RBP's Best Albums, 2000-2009. By Various Writers". Rock's Backpages. Retrieved May 13, 2024.
  • Anon. (2009l). "The 100 best pop albums of the Noughties". The Times. Archived from the original on August 10, 2021. Retrieved May 13, 2024.
  • Anon. (2010a). "Mos Def Announces Australian Tour". Triple J. from the original on May 8, 2016. Retrieved June 6, 2016.
  • Anon. (2010b). "Mos Def – Ecstatic Moments photographs by Cognito". HVW8. Retrieved August 29, 2018.
  • Anon. (2015). "X Gon' Give It To Ya: Five Rap Songs That Shine Light On Malcolm X's Brilliance". Vibe. from the original on August 16, 2016. Retrieved June 4, 2016.
  • Anon. (2016). "Yasiin Bey (Mos Def)". The New Yorker. Retrieved August 29, 2018.
  • Anon.[a] (n.d.). "The 100 Best Hip-Hop Albums of the 2000s". About.com. Retrieved June 4, 2016.
  • Anon.[c] (n.d.). . AllMusic. Archived from the original on September 28, 2016. Retrieved June 5, 2016.
  • Anon.[d] (n.d.). "Quiet Dog – Mos Def". AllMusic. from the original on September 28, 2016. Retrieved June 4, 2016.
  • Anon.[e] (n.d.). "The Ecstatic by Mos Def reviews". AnyDecentMusic?. Retrieved January 12, 2020.
  • Anon.[f] (n.d.). . Downtown Music. Archived from the original on June 24, 2009. Retrieved June 4, 2016.
  • Anon.[g] (n.d.). "Mos Def – The Ecstatic". Hung Medien. from the original on September 10, 2016. Retrieved June 5, 2016.
  • Anon.[h] (n.d.). "Reviews for The Ecstatic by Mos Def". Metacritic. from the original on February 21, 2016. Retrieved April 21, 2013.
  • Anon.[i] (June 29, 2009). "Week Commencing 29th June 2009" (PDF). The ARIA Report (1009). Australian Recording Industry Association. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 2, 2009. Retrieved June 28, 2020 – via Pandora Archive.
  • Anon.[j] (n.d.). "Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums – Year-End 2009". Billboard. Retrieved October 23, 2020.
  • Baker, Soren (2014). . HipHopDX. Archived from the original on March 11, 2016. Retrieved June 4, 2016.
  • Balfour, Jay (2013). "Yasiin Bey (Mos Def) & Preservation Release 'The REcstatic' Remix Album". HipHopDX. from the original on June 16, 2016. Retrieved June 13, 2016.
  • Bronson, Kevin (August 21, 2009). "Ecstatic and Inspired, Mos Def Does It Again". MusicWorld. Broadcast Music, Inc. Retrieved August 29, 2018.
  • Byrne, Niall (2009). . State. Archived from the original on August 7, 2016. Retrieved June 6, 2016.
  • Carroll, Jim (2009). "Mos Def". The Irish Times. from the original on August 5, 2016. Retrieved June 16, 2016.
  • Caulfield, Keith (2009). "Black Eyed Peas 'E.N.D.' Up At No. 1 On Billboard 200". Billboard. from the original on May 26, 2016. Retrieved June 5, 2016.
  • Chennault, Sam (2009). . Rhapsody. Archived from the original on December 15, 2009. Retrieved May 13, 2024.
  • Christgau, Robert (2009). "Consumer Guide". MSN Music. Archived from the original on January 16, 2011. Retrieved January 15, 2011.
  • Christgau, Robert (2010). "The Dean's List: The Best Albums of 2009". The Barnes & Noble Review. from the original on August 6, 2020. Retrieved June 5, 2016.
  • Dantana (2009). "Updated: Mos Def Presents The Ecstatic Tour ft Jay Electronica". Okayplayer. from the original on August 4, 2016. Retrieved June 6, 2016.
  • Daulatzai, Sohail (2012). Black Star, Crescent Moon: The Muslim International and Black Freedom Beyond America. U of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-0816675869.
  • Diamond, Samuel (2013). "Yasiin Bey & Preservation – The REcstatic". Tiny Mix Tapes. from the original on August 8, 2016. Retrieved June 13, 2016.
  • Diver, Mike (2010). "BBC Music's Best Albums of 2009". BBC. Retrieved May 13, 2024.
  • Ducker, Jesse (June 8, 2019). "Revisiting Mos Def's 'The Ecstatic' (2009)". Albumism. Retrieved August 29, 2021.
  • Eisinger, Dale (2013). "The Ecstatic – The 50 Best Rap Album Covers of the Past Five Years". Complex. from the original on June 19, 2016. Retrieved June 6, 2016.
  • Faughnder, Ryan (2009). "Top 50 Albums of 2009 (Part One)". No Ripcord. from the original on April 15, 2016. Retrieved July 11, 2015.
  • Fennessey, Sean (January–February 2010). "40 Best Albums of 2009". Spin. New York. p. 33. ISSN 0886-3032. Retrieved May 13, 2024 – via Google Books.
  • Ford, Winston "Stone" (February 2010). "Interview: Cognito, Mos Def's Documentiarian and curator of Ecstatic Moments". The Couch Sessions. Retrieved August 29, 2018.
  • Gundersen, Edna (2009). "Mos Def is Most Thoughtful as He Focuses on Myriad Projects". USA Today. from the original on February 5, 2016. Retrieved June 4, 2016.
  • Harling, Danielle (2009). . HipHopDX. Archived from the original on March 10, 2016. Retrieved February 20, 2011.
  • Henderson, Eric (2009). "Mos Def: The Ecstatic". Slant Magazine. from the original on June 23, 2013. Retrieved April 21, 2013.
  • Hoard, Christian (2009). . Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on June 17, 2009. Retrieved April 21, 2013.
  • Huff, Quentin B. (2009). "Hip-Hop & the Contrast Principle". PopMatters. from the original on August 6, 2016. Retrieved June 5, 2016.
  • Iles, Matthew (September 14, 2009). "Woodstock and sports: Page 2 connects the dots between 1969 and 2009". ESPN.com. Retrieved September 9, 2020.
  • Jones, Steve (2009). "'Ecstatic' Elevates Def's Game". USA Today. from the original on September 24, 2016. Retrieved June 13, 2016.
  • Kellman, Andy (n.d.). "The Ecstatic – Mos Def". AllMusic. from the original on March 27, 2013. Retrieved April 21, 2013.
  • Ketchum III, William E. (November 27, 2019). "Yasiin Bey Talks 'Negus,' Visual Art, And Unreleased Music". Vibe. Retrieved August 29, 2021.
  • Keyes, J. Edward (September 30, 2009). "Austin City Limits 2009: Ultimate Schedule Guide". Rolling Stone. from the original on September 1, 2018. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  • Kot, Greg (2009). . Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on March 9, 2012. Retrieved April 21, 2013.
  • Lamb, Karas (2013). "Yasiin Bey & Preservation Present: 'The REcstatic'". Okayplayer. Retrieved June 13, 2016.
  • MacInnes, Paul (2009). "Mos Def: The Ecstatic". The Guardian. from the original on April 22, 2010. Retrieved April 21, 2013.
  • Maness, Carter (2009). "Current TV Follows Mos Def Around Japan". The Boombox. from the original on July 1, 2016. Retrieved June 6, 2016.
  • Michaels, Sean (2009). "Mos Def to Release New Album … on a T-shirt". The Guardian. from the original on August 11, 2016. Retrieved June 3, 2016.
  • Middles, Mick (2009). "Mos Def". The Quietus. Archived from the original on July 15, 2012. Retrieved April 21, 2013.
  • Murray, Robin (2010). "Mos Def Unveils UK Tour". Clash. from the original on June 25, 2016. Retrieved June 6, 2016.
  • Owsinski, Bobby (2009). Music 3.0: A Survival Guide for Making Music in the Internet Age. Hal Leonard Corporation. ISBN 978-1423474012.
  • Patrin, Nate (May 14, 2009). "'Casa Bey' by Mos Def Review". Pitchfork. Retrieved September 10, 2020.
  • Patrin, Nate (June 10, 2009). "Mos Def: The Ecstatic". Pitchfork. from the original on April 15, 2013. Retrieved April 21, 2013.
  • Potton, Ed (2009). . The Times. Archived from the original on March 3, 2012. Retrieved January 15, 2011. (subscription required)
  • Rabin, Nathan (2009). "Mos Def: The Ecstatic". The A.V. Club. from the original on January 7, 2011. Retrieved April 21, 2013.
  • Raible, Allan (2009). . ABC News. Archived from the original on August 7, 2016. Retrieved June 6, 2016.
  • Richman, Simmy (2009). "Album: Mos Def, The Ecstatic (Downtown)". The Independent. from the original on August 29, 2014. Retrieved April 21, 2013.
  • Samuel, Steven (2008). "Mos Def 'Ecstatic' About Upcoming CD". SOHH. from the original on August 4, 2016. Retrieved June 5, 2016.
  • Samuel, Steven (2009). "Mos Def Reveals New Album Details, Bringing Back Def Poetry". SOHH. from the original on August 4, 2016. Retrieved June 4, 2016.
  • Sawdey, Evan (August 2021). "Music artists who walked away at the top of their game". Yardbarker. Retrieved August 29, 2021.
  • Siehndel, Patrick; Abel, Fabian; Diaz-Aviles, Ernesto; Henze, Nicola; Krause, Daniel (2013). "Cross-Domain Analysis of the Blogosphere for Trend Prediction". In Özyer, Tansel; Rokne, Jon; Wagner, Gerhard; Reuser, Arno H. P. (eds.). The Influence of Technology on Social Network Analysis and Mining. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-3709113462.
  • Slavik, Nathan (2009). . DJBooth. Archived from the original on August 8, 2016. Retrieved June 4, 2016.
  • Spadine, Richard (2009). "Mos Def – Casa Bey". DJBooth. from the original on October 24, 2016. Retrieved June 5, 2016.
  • St. John, Colin (2009). "Review: Mos Def". Time Out. from the original on September 18, 2016. Retrieved June 4, 2016.
  • Stewart, Allison (2009). "Music Review: Black Eyed Peas' 'The E.N.D.'; Mos Def's 'The Ecstatic'". The Washington Post. from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved June 5, 2016.
  • Stosuy, Brandon (2009). . Stereogum. Archived from the original on February 13, 2021. Retrieved May 13, 2024.
  • Sundaresan, Mano (February 5, 2020). "The Paradox of Yasiin Bey's 'Negus,' A Rap Album Trapped in an Art Museum". NPR Music. Retrieved August 29, 2021.
  • Thompson, Ben (2009). "CD: Pop Review: Mos Def, The Ecstatic". The Observer. from the original on April 22, 2010. Retrieved April 21, 2013.
  • Tyrangiel, Josh (May 18, 2009). "Mos Def's The Ecstatic – Summer Arts Preview". Time. Retrieved August 29, 2018.
  • Vozick-Levinson, Simon (2009). "The Ecstatic". Entertainment Weekly. from the original on March 13, 2016. Retrieved June 6, 2016.
  • Wappler, Margaret (June 9, 2009). "Album review: Mos Def's 'The Ecstatic'". Pop & Hiss. Retrieved August 29, 2018.
  • Young, Alex (2009). "Mos Def – The Ecstatic". Consequence of Sound. from the original on August 8, 2016. Retrieved June 4, 2016.
  • Zercoe, Cole (2013). "BPM 5: The Top 130 Albums". Beats Per Minute. Retrieved May 13, 2024.

Further reading edit

  • Brie (2013). "Yasiin Bey x Preservation — The REcstatic Album Stream". Okayplayer. Retrieved July 13, 2021.
  • MissFrolab (2009). . Frolab. Archived from the original on August 8, 2016. Retrieved June 6, 2016.
  • MissFrolab (2009). . Frolab. Archived from the original on August 8, 2016. Retrieved June 5, 2016.

External links edit

  • The Ecstatic (Adobe Flash) at Myspace (streamed copy where licensed)
  • The Ecstatic at Discogs (list of releases)
  • The REcstatic at Discogs
  • The REcstatic (Adobe Flash) at HotNewHipHop (streamed copy where licensed)

ecstatic, fourth, studio, album, american, rapper, released, june, 2009, independent, record, label, downtown, records, after, venturing, further, away, from, with, acting, career, poorly, received, albums, signed, recording, contract, with, downtown, recorded. The Ecstatic is the fourth studio album by American rapper Mos Def released on June 9 2009 by the independent record label Downtown Records After venturing further away from hip hop with an acting career and two poorly received albums Mos Def signed a recording contract with Downtown and recorded The Ecstatic primarily at the Record Plant in Los Angeles He worked with producers such as Preservation Mr Flash Oh No and Madlib with the latter two reusing instrumentals they had produced on Stones Throw Records The work of Stones Throw rapper MF Doom was also cited by Mos Def as an influence while singer Georgia Anne Muldrow formerly of the record label performed as one of the album s few guest vocalists along with rappers Slick Rick and Talib Kweli The EcstaticStudio album by Mos DefReleasedJune 9 2009StudioRecord PlantSomeothaship Connect Los Angeles Downtown Music New York Hovercraft Virginia Beach GenreConscious rap alternative hip hopLength45 34LabelDowntownProducerGeorgia Anne MuldrowJ DillaMadlibMos DefMr FlashThe NeptunesOh NoPreservationMos Def chronologyTrue Magic 2006 The Ecstatic 2009 December 99th 2016 Singles from The Ecstatic Life in Marvelous Times Released November 4 2008 Quiet Dog Bite Hard Released January 13 2009 Casa Bey Released May 26 2009 Described by music journalists as a conscious and alternative hip hop record The Ecstatic features an eccentric internationalist quality Mos Def s raps about global politics love war spirituality and social conditions are informed by the zeitgeist of the late 2000s Black internationalism and Pan Islamic ideas incorporating a number of Islamic references throughout the album Its loosely structured lightly reverbed songs use unconventional time signatures and samples taken from a variety of international musical styles including Afrobeat soul Eurodance jazz reggae Latin and Middle Eastern music Mos Def titled the album after one of his favorite novels Victor LaValle s The Ecstatic 2002 believing its titular phrase evoked his singular musical vision For the album s front cover a still from Charles Burnett s 1978 film Killer of Sheep was reproduced in red tint The Ecstatic charted at number nine on the Billboard 200 in its first week of release and eventually sold 168 000 copies Its sales benefited from its presence on Internet blogs and the release of a T shirt illustrating the record s packaging alongside a label printed with a code redeemable for a free download of the album To further support the album Mos Def embarked on an international tour with concerts in North America Japan Australia and the United Kingdom between August 2009 and April 2010 As his DJ on the tour Preservation began to develop remixes of the album s songs which he later released on the remix album The REcstatic in 2013 A widespread critical success The Ecstatic was viewed as a return to form for Mos Def and one of the best albums from 2009 with reviewers applauding its exuberant musical feel adventurous creative range and shrewd lyrical performances Some publications ranked it among the greatest albums of the 2000s decade including The Times at number 30 However it struggled to reach mainstream audiences beyond Mos Def s fan base and led the already disillusioned rapper further away from the music industry resulting in less recorded work from him over subsequent years Contents 1 Background 2 Recording and production 3 Music and lyrics 4 Title and packaging 5 Marketing and sales 6 Critical reception 7 Photo exhibition 8 Remix album 9 Aftermath and legacy 10 Track listing 11 Personnel 12 Charts 12 1 Weekly charts 12 2 Year end charts 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 16 Bibliography 17 Further reading 18 External linksBackground editBy the mid 2000s Mos Def had established himself as one of hip hop music s leading auteurs with records that sold millions of copies while realizing a pan African worldview although the rapper grew increasingly wary of the music industry 1 In 2006 his third album True Magic was released haphazardly by Geffen Records to fulfill a contractual obligation while he was devoting more time to his acting career 2 The quality of the album along with his repeated ventures away from recording hip hop left some fans wondering if Mos Def s acting accomplishments were finally affecting his music PopMatters critic Quentin B Huff chronicles 3 Speaking with Spank Rock for Interview magazine Mos Def expressed a jadedness with the commodifying aspect of the hip hop industry and elucidated his artistic goals at the time You have to get busy There are so many things I can t control what people think I m not trying to manipulate people s thoughts or sentiments I write all the time You have to experience life make observations ask questions I come to uplift the people It doesn t have to be fashionable I don t mind being black I m black out loud It s more than the people that they are it s the condition that they represent I don t hate nobody I hate certain conditions that are inflicted upon the people and they re helpless with it To me the job of an artist is to provide a useful and intelligent vocabulary for the world to be able to articulate feelings they experience every day 4 After his tenure on Geffen ended Mos Def signed a record deal with the independent label Downtown Records and proceeded to record The Ecstatic as his first album for the label 5 Recording and production edit nbsp Mos Def in 2008 Mos Def recorded most of the album in sessions at the Record Plant in Los Angeles The songs Twilight Speedball No Hay Nada Mas and Roses were partially recorded at Hovercraft Studios in Virginia Beach Someothaship Connect in Los Angeles and New York City s Downtown Music Studios 6 He worked with producers Mr Flash Oh No Madlib and Preservation who previously produced some of True Magic s songs For The Ecstatic Oh No reused some of his productions from his 2007 album Dr No s Oxperiment while Madlib incorporated samples from his Beat Konducta in India 2007 record For Life in Marvelous Times Mr Flash reused the beat from Champions his 2006 collaboration with the French hip hop group TTC while History used a beat produced by J Dilla before his death 7 With Preservation Mos Def produced Casa Bey after a 2006 trip to Rio de Janeiro where local rapper MV Bill introduced him to the music of Banda Black Rio 8 nb 1 Mos Def and Preservation altered one of the band s songs Casa Forte an instrumental featuring their characteristic blend of funk jazz soul and Brazilian rhythms and used it as the beat 8 The original song title meaning strong house in Portuguese was changed to Casa Bey Bey was Mos Def s family surname According to him he tried to enlist rappers Jay Electronica Black Thought and Trugoy for the song but they all found it too difficult to rap over the instrumental 4 The recording sessions featured collaborations with singer Georgia Anne Muldrow and rappers Slick Rick and Talib Kweli Mos Def s partner in the rap duo Black Star 10 Muldrow sang and played piano on Roses which she originally wrote and recorded in 2008 for her album Umsindo 2009 She said Mos Def borrowed the song for The Ecstatic after they met through a mutual friend They came over one day and started playing Roses He was singing the song and knew it He said I wanna grab that I said Man I already got this as a single He just wanted that song He snatched it up real quick she recalled in laughter 11 Along with Madlib Oh No and J Dilla Muldrow had been an affiliate of Stones Throw Records according to journalist Nathan Rabin they collectively produced half of the album lending its sound a sympathetic quality 12 During the recording Mos Def was also influenced by fellow rapper MF Doom at one point improvising raps from the latter s 2004 album Mm Food while in the studio He rhymes as weird as I feel he said of Doom citing his Madlib collaboration Madvillainy 2004 as well 13 With The Ecstatic Mos Def said he wanted to offer listeners sincere uninhibited observations about life and love some truth and positive heart lift without the need for club songs No disrespect to the club 14 Music and lyrics edit nbsp Auditorium source source On Auditorium Mos Def raps about daily struggles and global politics over a Middle Eastern influenced instrumental produced by Madlib 15 Problems playing this file See media help The Ecstatic covers an international range of styles in a very loose and extemporaneous manner held together by what Rabin describes as a lyrical and sonic fascination with life beyond the Western World 16 According to Robert Christgau the songs average two and a half minutes and segue into one another without resolution giving it the feel of a globally influenced hip hop mixtape with poles in Brooklyn and Beirut 17 The music reflects Mos Def s varied interests in jazz poetry Eastern rhythms psychedelia Spanish music and the blues 18 The tracks on the first half are as The Observer s Ben Thompson describes predominantly Eastward looking while the second half indulges more in Latin and reggae influences 19 Other sounds sampled or explored include Afrobeat Quiet Dog Bite Hard Eurodance Life in Marvelous Times Bollywood Supermagic and Philadelphia soul 20 Supermagic also draws on elements from Turkish acid rock and Mary Poppins while on No Hay Nada Mas Mos Def sings and raps in Spanish over a flamenco influenced production 21 He sings elsewhere on the album often breaking into sing song vamps during his raps 22 Along with his singing the often sample based music is unconventional in its use of what Preservation calls unusual time signatures and awkward breakdowns 23 nbsp US marines in Baghdad during Operation Iraqi Freedom April 2003 The album features criticism of the Iraq War 24 According to The Independent s Simmy Richman The Ecstatic s Eastern influenced musical backdrop is reflective of Mos Def s post War on Terror themes Richman calls it a conscious rap record and No Ripcord s Ryan Faughnder regards it as socially conscious alternative hip hop 25 African American studies and media scholar Sohail Daulatzai believes the album is informed by Black internationalist politics and Pan Islamic ideas while State magazine s Niall Byrne says it explores the theme of international relations on songs such as the Middle Eastern influenced The Embassy and Auditorium which features an Iraq themed guest rap by Slick Rick 26 On The Embassy Mos Def raps from the perspective of an outsider about the lifestyle of an ambassador at a luxury hotel while the opening song Supermagic critiques government treatment of minority groups 27 Mos Def incorporates a number of Islamic references throughout the album including samples of American Muslim activist Malcolm X Turkish protest singer Selda Bagcan and an Arab language scene from the 1966 film The Battle of Algiers additionally the track Wahid is titled after the Arabic word for oneness 28 You re living at a time of extremism a time of revolution a time when there s got to be a change People in power have misused it And now there has to be a change and a better world has to be built and the only way it s going to be built is with extreme methods And I for one will join in with anyone I don t care what color you are as long as you want to change this miserable condition that exists on this earth Thank you 1964 Malcolm X speech sampled for the beginning of the album 29 As on Mos Def s other albums he speaks a dedication to God in Arabic Bismillah ar Rahman ar Raheem at the start of The Ecstatic This leads into Supermagic and its opening sample of Malcolm X s 1964 speech at Oxford Union 30 The sample prefaces the album s small globe statement as Pitchfork journalist Nate Patrin explains saying it indicates that Mos Def has a stake in something greater than just one corner of the rap world 7 Alex Young from Consequence of Sound believes the speech introduces a political album encompassing global beats and viewpoints 31 According to The Washington Post critic Allison Stewart Mos Def seems equally interested in the Obama era zeitgeist as in accounts of the past such as the early 1980s Bedford Stuyvesant setting of Life in Marvelous Times 18 Young deems the song anthemic for a seemingly paradoxical age that routinely sees events such as a Black man being elected president of a nation wallowing in racial inequality 31 From Christgau s perspective Mos Def offers a credo in the lyrics More of less than ever before It s just too much more for your mind to absorb It s scary like hell but there s no doubt We can t be alive in no time but now 17 Throughout The Ecstatic Mos Def alternates between what AllMusic s Andy Kellman calls nonsensical yet intellectual raps and seemingly nonchalant off the cuff boasts set against eccentric lightly reverbed productions 32 According to The Guardian s Paul MacInnes The Ecstatic features his characteristically fragmented lyrical style which loops words within phrases and plays on sound as much as meaning 33 Auditorium showcases his complex and convoluted lyricism delivered closely in rhythm with the beat Patrin says citing the lines soul is the lion s roar voice is the siren I swing round wring out and bring down the tyrant chop a small axe and knock a giant lopsided 7 He explores Afrocentric themes on Revelations and compares love to a gunfight on Pistola On Roses Muldrow sings nature friendly lyrics about drawing flowers in times of sadness rather than plucking them from the ground Roses is about creativity and human capacity she explains A lot of times Western society makes women base our sense of worth on diamonds are forever or a dozen roses and that s how you prove your love to somebody but you receive so many gifts and still feel empty So draw them and let the roses come from inside 11 Title and packaging edit nbsp Attendees of the 1928 Moorish Science Temple Conclave the photo was used for the album s back cover The Ecstatic was titled after Victor LaValle s 2002 dark humor novel 34 One of Mos Def s favorite novels it was written about an overweight college dropout who fell into mental illness while living with his eccentric family in Queens New York 35 According to Mos Def the phrase the ecstatic was used in the 17th and 18th centuries to describe people who were either mad or divinely inspired and consequently dismissed as kooks 34 The phrase resonated with him as he believed no one else in hip hop had ever recorded an album like The Ecstatic I feel like I was the only person who was capable of making this type of music in this type of way he claimed I don t rap like nobody I don t try to sound like nobody 36 He said the ecstatic also refers to a type of devotional energy an impossible dream that becomes reality but is discredited before it s realized The airplane a nutty idea The telephone the Internet People who envisioned those were considered radical or extreme 34 The Ecstatic was packaged with few liner notes and a two sheet booklet featuring a photo of Mos Def taken using the Photo Booth software application 37 The front cover photo reproduced a still in red tint from Killer of Sheep a low budget 1978 film by Charles Burnett about African American life in 1970s Watts Los Angeles 38 According to Dale Eisinger from Complex the subtle and still moving photo reflects the ideas of cultural justice and global inequality present throughout Mos Def s career while capturing the sonic construction of The Ecstatic s music The cover has hazy dream like movement Eisinger said appearing as a non narrative loose collection of vignettes that are tangentially fascinating and incredibly powerful 39 For the back cover a 1928 photo of the Moorish Science Temple gathering in Chicago was used which Daulatzai interpreted as another element of Mos Def s Pan Islamic mashup on the album 28 Marketing and sales edit nbsp Mos Def performing at the New Parish in Oakland October 2009 The Ecstatic was released by Downtown on June 9 2009 40 In its first week the album sold 39 000 copies and debuted at number nine on the Billboard 200 becoming the second record of Mos Def s career to reach the top 10 on the chart 41 The following week he became the first recording artist to endorse the Original Music Tee a T shirt featuring the album cover on the front the track listing on the back and a tag with a code to download an MP3 copy of the record 42 The marketing strategy led to enough sales that Billboard factored the T shirts as album units on the magazine s music charts 43 The Ecstatic also benefited from the number of mentions it received on Internet blog posts which peaked during the week of June 29 44 The album reached 168 000 copies sold in March 2014 45 Three singles were released to promote the album Life in Marvelous Times on November 4 2008 Quiet Dog Bite Hard on January 13 2009 and Casa Bey on May 26 46 According to Charles Aaron Life in Marvelous Times was the most powerful and accessible song Mos Def had ever recorded but it could not even manage to receive airplay on radio stations in his native New York If it can t get on the radio then I don t need to be on the radio the rapper said in August expressing a wavering interest in reaching mainstream audiences 47 Mos Def supported the album further with an international tour which began its North American leg in early August 2009 This stretch of concerts spanned a number of US and Canadian cities including Chicago Miami Washington D C Miami Portland Calgary and Vancouver Jay Electronica performed as his opening act and certain shows were co headlined with Kweli and singer Erykah Badu 48 The leg concluded on October 3 with an evening performance slot at the Austin City Limits Music Festival 49 Mos Def continued touring into the following year playing a series of concerts in Japan during late 2009 which were documented in an episode of the Current TV series Embedded This was followed by his first headlining tour of Australia in January 2010 and a short series of April concerts in the United Kingdom 50 Critical reception editProfessional ratingsAggregate scoresSourceRatingAnyDecentMusic 7 7 10 51 Metacritic81 100 40 Review scoresSourceRatingAllMusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 32 Entertainment WeeklyB 52 The Guardian nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 33 The Irish Times nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 53 MSN Music Consumer Guide A 17 Pitchfork8 0 10 7 Rolling Stone nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 54 Spin9 10 55 The Times nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 56 USA Today nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 57 The Ecstatic was met with widespread critical acclaim 40 After two poorly received records by Mos Def it was viewed by critics as a return to the form of his 1999 debut album Black on Both Sides earning some of the best reviews of his career 58 At Metacritic which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from professional publications The Ecstatic received an average score of 81 based on 28 reviews 40 Aggregator AnyDecentMusic gave it 7 7 out of 10 based on their assessment of the critical consensus 51 In The New Yorker The Ecstatic was hailed as Mos Def s most conceptually knotty and ambitious work while Aaron wrote in Spin that the internationalist return to form is also perhaps his liveliest work 59 For The Irish Times Jim Carroll said the rapper has not performed this engagingly or skillfully since his career beginnings highlighting especially Supermagic and Life in Marvelous Times 53 Mick Middles from The Quietus appraised it as the joyful sound of a rampant artist unrestrained by expectation or commercialism with free flowing music that escapes the boundaries his previous albums had merely pushed 60 Ben Thompson in The Observer believed the diverse range of samples make it a crate digger s wet dream and a thrillingly accessible demonstration of hip hop s limitless creative possibilities to a layperson 19 Writing for MSN Music Christgau felt the songs are devoid of hooks but full of sounds you want to hear again along with thoughtfully slurred yet intelligible lyrics by Mos Def whose creative vision warrants the introductory Malcolm X sample 17 In the opinion of Time s Josh Tyrangiel his political meditations may not appeal to conservatives but are rich in the rhythm exuberance and wit Mos Def showed on his early records 61 Steve Jones of USA Today said his reflections on politics love religion and societal conditions are full of insight and sincerity while calling the album his strongest effort 57 Some reviewers were less impressed Rolling Stone critic Christian Hoard found the quality of the songs inconsistent while Slant Magazine s Eric Henderson claimed much of the music lacks song structure and careen s wildly free from the constraints of chorus and verse 62 Margaret Wappler evaluated the record with qualified praise in the Los Angeles Times saying it mostly lives up to its giddy name but wanes occasionally while the artful samples may challenge listeners at first 63 At the end of 2009 The Ecstatic was named one of the year s 10 best albums 64 It was ranked 30th by The Guardian 65 24th by Q 66 23rd by Slant Magazine 67 17th by Rolling Stone 68 16th by Sputnikmusic 69 15th by PopMatters 70 10th by Relevant 71 7th by Spin 72 and 3rd by eMusic 73 About com and BBC Music both named it the year s best rap record 74 75 In The Village Voice s Pazz amp Jop an annual poll of American critics nationwide The Ecstatic was voted the 11th best album of 2009 76 Christgau the poll s creator ranked it 12th on his own year end list for The Barnes amp Noble Review 77 The Times placed it at number 30 on the newspaper s decade end list of the 100 greatest records from the 2000s 78 It finished at numbers 27 and 155 on similar lists published by Rhapsody and Rock s Backpages respectively 79 80 The Ecstatic also earned Mos Def nominations for the 52nd Annual Grammy Awards 2010 in the categories of Best Rap Album and Best Rap Solo Performance for Casa Bey 81 However he lost in both categories to Eminem s Relapse 2009 and Jay Z s D O A Death of Auto Tune 2009 respectively 13 Photo exhibition editBetween January 30 and February 6 2010 the HVW8 Art amp Design Gallery in Los Angeles held an exclusive one week exhibition titled Mos Def Ecstatic Moments Photographs It showcased a collection of photos taken by Cognito a longtime hip hop documentarian and colleague of Mos Def capturing the rapper during the two years spent making and promoting The Ecstatic Included in the exhibition were candid photographs of him in the studio with the album s producers and photos of his experiences visiting and touring locations around the world including the Cape of Good Hope and Sao Paulo A series of posse shots taken at the end of concerts from the American tour were also displayed showing the rapper with Jay Electronica Kweli Badu and musician Shuggie Otis who made an unexpected appearance during the tour 64 The timing of the exhibition was meant to capitalize on Mos Def s two nominations for the Grammy Awards which were being held that week I thought it was a perfect time to honor his presence while he s here Cognito explained We ve had a lot of our greats pass away in the past couple of years be it Dilla or Bataan sic or whoever and now everybody wants to talk Dilla Dilla Dilla or whatever but you weren t saying that while he was alive Let s praise our heroes while they re alive 82 Remix album edit nbsp Preservation in 2007 While on tour as Mos Def s in concert DJ Preservation began to remix some of The Ecstatic s songs for their live routine He challenged himself to remix the rest of the album as The REcstatic taking more than a year and working with Jan Fairchild the original record s mixing engineer 83 Preservation revisited sources for the original beats to find similar recordings that would correspond to each song s particular aesthetic while preserving Mos Def s vocals for the remixes 84 He wanted them to be sample based and consistent in key pitch and tone to the original album which he found difficult to achieve because of its unorthodox instrumentals and singing It s the result of countless hours of digging through records to sample he recalled Constructing the beat wrapping it around the vocal adjusting the tempo and so on 84 Black Fantastic an outtake produced by Minnesota during The Ecstatic s recording replaced Casa Bey in the final track listing as Preservation had found the tempo and structure of the original song too difficult to make a satisfactory remix 23 The REcstatic was released as a free download on June 12 2013 by Preservation s imprint label Mon Dieu Music 23 Reviewing the remix album in Tiny Mix Tapes Samuel Diamond said the rapturous energy of the original record was given a slightly rougher texture on what he deemed a respectful contribution to the canon of remix based art something that can be said for very few modern rap remixes 85 Aftermath and legacy editIt s machine like how things are run now in hip hop and my ambitions are different I m not knocking it but I have my mind on another type of prize There s another way to achieve that success too There s another way with less congestion less emissions I ve been spending my time building that road You have to look for validation from yourself Who wants to be the outcast But you have to commit to who you are Also a lot of it is the manifestation of society and colonialism in the industry Radiohead can be as avant garde as they want and still have pop success but if you re black you have to surrender yourself to the flashing lights Mos Def speaking on his disillusionment while promoting The Ecstatic 86 Despite The Ecstatic s success with fans and critics Mos Def remained disillusioned with the music industry and moved on creatively according to Yardbarker journalist Evan Sawdey 87 Changing his name to Yasiin Bey the rapper recorded sporadically during the 2010s appearing on songs by other hip hop artists such as ASAP Rocky Ski Beatz Currensy and Kanye West 88 Meanwhile he received media coverage for largely nonmusical ventures and incidents including a torture reenactment filmed in protest of the Guantanamo Bay detention camp and an illegal residence in Cape Town South Africa where he was detained for almost one year after trying to leave the country using a World Passport 86 In 2013 Beats Per Minute named The Ecstatic as the 112th best album of the past five years 89 In 2015 the rapper went to London for recording sessions that would produce his next album Negus using raps he had written during the previous few years 90 The following year he announced on West s website that he was retiring from both the music and film industries although he promised a few more collaborative recordings and one more solo album 86 Despite the 2016 Ferrari Sheppard collaboration December 99th Albumism writer Jesse Ducker regards The Ecstatic as his last hurrah and the last album I acknowledge that he released as well as a reminder that when he gives a shit he s still as good as anyone at recording music Ducker adds that its music should have won both Grammy Awards for which it was nominated in 2010 13 After private presentations at art fairs in Morocco Dubai and Hong Kong the rapper s next work Negus in Natural Person or simply Negus premiered to the public on November 15 2019 as a listening installation at the Brooklyn Museum in New York Billed as an homage to public figures who led noble lives such as Prince Alemayehu Henrietta Lacks and Nipsey Hussle the exhibit was open for 10 weeks and featured the 28 minute musical album playable with on ear wireless headphones given to attendees alongside a visual artwork installation designed by the rapper Jose Parla Julie Mehretu and Ala Ebtekar However the album went unreleased outside of the exhibit which itself was largely ignored by the hip hop community 86 That same month Vibe reported that The Ecstatic had been withdrawn from streaming services The ownership of that album has come out of the hands of the corporation that owned it previously That s why it s not there anymore the rapper explained But there s still opportunities for people to hear it in other mediums and the team is putting those things together 90 Track listing editCredits are adapted from Downtown Music 6 The Ecstatic track listingNo TitleWriter s Producer s Length1 Supermagic Dante Smith Michael JacksonOh No2 322 Twilite Speedball Smith Chad HugoThe Neptunes Mos Def3 023 Auditorium featuring Slick Rick Smith Otis Jackson Jr Richard WaltersMadlib Mos Def4 344 Wahid Smith O JacksonMadlib1 395 Priority Smith Jean DavalPreservation1 226 Quiet Dog Bite Hard Smith DavalPreservation2 577 Life in Marvelous Times Smith Gilles BousquetMr Flash3 418 The Embassy Smith Bousquet Ihsan al MunzerMr Flash Mos Def2 459 No Hay Nada Mas Smith DavalPreservation1 4210 Pistola Smith M Jackson Anthony HesterOh No3 0211 Pretty Dancer Smith O JacksonMadlib3 3112 Workers Comp Smith Bousquet Marvin GayeMr Flash2 0213 Revelations Smith O Jackson Michael DrakeMadlib2 0314 Roses featuring Georgia Anne Muldrow Smith Georgia Anne MuldrowGeorgia Anne Muldrow3 4115 History featuring Talib Kweli Smith James Yancey Talib K Greene Zekkariyas Mary Wells WomackJ Dilla2 2116 Casa Bey Smith Eduardo LoboPreservation Mos Def nb 2 4 32 Sample credits Supermagic contains a sample of Ince Ince by Selda Bagcan Priority contains elements from Flower by Bobby Hebb Quiet Dog Bite Hard contains portions of an interview with Fela Kuti from the documentary film Music Is the Weapon The Embassy contains a sample of The Joy of Lina by Ihsan al Munzer Pistola contains elements from In the Rain by Billy Wooten Workers Comp contains a sample of If This World Were Mine by Marvin Gaye Revelations contains portions of Colours by Michael Drake History contains a sample of Two Lovers History by Mary Wells Casa Bey contains a sample of Casa Forte by Banda Black Rio Personnel editCredits are adapted from Downtown Music 6 Fernando Aponte engineering Danny Betancourt engineering Josh Blair additional vocal engineering Matt De Sando additional vocal engineering Sayyd Droullard additional engineering Jan Fairchild engineering mixing Josh Grant additional engineering Bernie Grundman mastering Zach Hancock additional engineering Myron Kingsbury assistant engineering Talib Kweli vocals Georgia Anne Muldrow engineering piano production vocals The Neptunes production Madlib production Mos Def arrangement production vocals Mr Flash production Oh No production Preservation arrangement production Slick Rick vocals Ben Yonas additional vocal engineeringCharts editWeekly charts edit Chart performance for The Ecstatic Chart 2009 Peakposition Australian Albums ARIA 92 91 Canadian Albums Billboard 32 24 French Albums SNEP 93 172 Swiss Albums Schweizer Hitparade 93 90 US Billboard 200 32 9 US Top R amp B Hip Hop Albums Billboard 32 5 Year end charts edit 2009 year end chart performance for The Ecstatic Chart 2009 Position US Top R amp B Hip Hop Albums Billboard 94 98See also edit2009 in hip hop music Madlib discography Mos Def discography Progressive rapNotes edit According to Nate Patrin of Pitchfork it is rumoured that Mos Def was in South America at the time scouting shooting locations for The Brazilian Job the purported sequel to the 2003 film The Italian Job in which he had starred before it got caught up in development hell 9 No producers are listed for Casa Bey in the official album credits although DJBooth reported that Preservation and Mos Def had produced the song 91 References edit Sundaresan 2020 Sawdey 2021 Samuel 2009 Huff 2009 Huff 2009 a b Anon 2009a Samuel 2009 Sundaresan 2020 a b c Anon f n d a b c d Patrin 2009b a b Spadine 2009 Patrin 2009a Anon h n d Jones 2009 a b Anon 2009b Rabin 2009 a b c Ducker 2019 Anon 2009a Gundersen 2009 Slavik 2009 Patrin 2009b Rabin 2009 a b c d Christgau 2009 a b Stewart 2009 a b Thompson 2009 Kot 2009 Patrin 2009b Kellman n d Kot 2009 Patrin 2009b Stewart 2009 Kot 2009 Patrin 2009b a b c Balfour 2013 Iles 2009 Richman 2009 Faughnder 2009 Daulatzai 2012 p 132 Byrne 2009 Christgau 2009 Byrne 2009 Anon 2015 a b Daulatzai 2012 p 132 Anon 2015 Daulatzai 2012 p 132 St John 2009 Patrin 2009b a b Young 2009 a b c d e Kellman n d a b MacInnes 2009 a b c Gundersen 2009 Samuel 2009 Gundersen 2009 Gundersen 2009 Anon 2009a Raible 2009 Patrin 2009b Eisinger 2013 Eisinger 2013 a b c d Anon h n d Anon h n d Caulfield 2009 Michaels 2009 Owsinski 2009 p 70 Siehndel et al 2013 p 279 Baker 2014 Samuel 2008 Anon d n d Anon c n d Aaron 2009 p 78 Dantana 2009 Keyes 2009 Murray 2010 Maness 2009 Anon 2010a a b Anon e n d Vozick Levinson 2009 a b Carroll 2009 Hoard 2009 Aaron 2009 p 80 Potton 2009 a b Jones 2009 Huff 2009 Bronson 2009 Anon 2016 Aaron 2009 p 80 Middles 2009 Tyrangiel 2009 Henderson 2009 Hoard 2009 Wappler 2009 a b Anon 2010b Anon 2009c Stosuy 2009 Anon 2009e Anon 2009d Anon 2009i Anon 2009f Anon 2009g Fennessey 2010 Anon 2009h Anon a n d Diver 2010 Anon 2009j Christgau 2010 Anon 2009l Chennault 2009 Anon 2009k Harling 2009 Ford 2010 Balfour 2013 Lamb 2013 a b Lamb 2013 Diamond 2013 a b c d Sundaresan 2020 Ducker 2019 Sawdey 2021 Sundaresan 2020 Ducker 2019 Zercoe 2013 a b Ketchum III 2019 Anon f n d Spadine 2009 Anon i n d a b Anon g n d Anon j n d Bibliography editAaron Charles 2009 The SPIN Interview Mos Def Spin Vol 25 no 8 Anon 2009a House Music Mos Def Interview Archived from the original on September 13 2016 Retrieved June 13 2016 Anon 2009b Mos Def Clips Roses From Up And Coming Singer The Urban Daily Archived from the original on July 1 2016 Retrieved June 4 2016 Anon 2009c Critics poll 2009 Albums 11 50 The Guardian Retrieved May 13 2024 Anon 2009d The 25 Best Albums of 2009 Rolling Stone Archived from the original on March 23 2010 Retrieved May 13 2024 Anon 2009e The 25 Best Albums amp Singles of 2009 Slant Magazine Retrieved May 13 2024 Anon 2009f The 60 Best Albums of 2009 PopMatters Retrieved May 13 2024 Anon 2009g Relevant s Best Albums of 2009 Relevant Archived from the original on February 17 2010 Retrieved May 13 2024 Anon 2009h Best Albums of 2009 eMusic Archived from the original on January 7 2010 Retrieved May 13 2024 Anon 2009i Staff Picks Top Albums of 2009 Sputnikmusic Retrieved May 13 2024 Anon 2009j Pazz amp Jop 2009 The Village Voice Archived from the original on February 19 2010 Retrieved May 13 2024 Anon 2009k Very Noughtie RBP s Best Albums 2000 2009 By Various Writers Rock s Backpages Retrieved May 13 2024 Anon 2009l The 100 best pop albums of the Noughties The Times Archived from the original on August 10 2021 Retrieved May 13 2024 Anon 2010a Mos Def Announces Australian Tour Triple J Archived from the original on May 8 2016 Retrieved June 6 2016 Anon 2010b Mos Def Ecstatic Moments photographs by Cognito HVW8 Retrieved August 29 2018 Anon 2015 X Gon Give It To Ya Five Rap Songs That Shine Light On Malcolm X s Brilliance Vibe Archived from the original on August 16 2016 Retrieved June 4 2016 Anon 2016 Yasiin Bey Mos Def The New Yorker Retrieved August 29 2018 Anon a n d The 100 Best Hip Hop Albums of the 2000s About com Retrieved June 4 2016 Anon c n d Casa Bey Mos Def AllMusic Archived from the original on September 28 2016 Retrieved June 5 2016 Anon d n d Quiet Dog Mos Def AllMusic Archived from the original on September 28 2016 Retrieved June 4 2016 Anon e n d The Ecstatic by Mos Def reviews AnyDecentMusic Retrieved January 12 2020 Anon f n d Mos Def The Ecstatic Downtown Music Archived from the original on June 24 2009 Retrieved June 4 2016 Anon g n d Mos Def The Ecstatic Hung Medien Archived from the original on September 10 2016 Retrieved June 5 2016 Anon h n d Reviews for The Ecstatic by Mos Def Metacritic Archived from the original on February 21 2016 Retrieved April 21 2013 Anon i June 29 2009 Week Commencing 29th June 2009 PDF The ARIA Report 1009 Australian Recording Industry Association Archived from the original PDF on September 2 2009 Retrieved June 28 2020 via Pandora Archive Anon j n d Top R amp B Hip Hop Albums Year End 2009 Billboard Retrieved October 23 2020 Baker Soren 2014 50 Cent Leaves Interscope How Nas Busta Rhymes Ghostface Killah amp Mos Def Fared After Leaving Their Longtime Label Homes HipHopDX Archived from the original on March 11 2016 Retrieved June 4 2016 Balfour Jay 2013 Yasiin Bey Mos Def amp Preservation Release The REcstatic Remix Album HipHopDX Archived from the original on June 16 2016 Retrieved June 13 2016 Bronson Kevin August 21 2009 Ecstatic and Inspired Mos Def Does It Again MusicWorld Broadcast Music Inc Retrieved August 29 2018 Byrne Niall 2009 Mos Def The Ecstatic State Archived from the original on August 7 2016 Retrieved June 6 2016 Carroll Jim 2009 Mos Def The Irish Times Archived from the original on August 5 2016 Retrieved June 16 2016 Caulfield Keith 2009 Black Eyed Peas E N D Up At No 1 On Billboard 200 Billboard Archived from the original on May 26 2016 Retrieved June 5 2016 Chennault Sam 2009 100 Best Albums of the Decade 21 30 Rhapsody Archived from the original on December 15 2009 Retrieved May 13 2024 Christgau Robert 2009 Consumer Guide MSN Music Archived from the original on January 16 2011 Retrieved January 15 2011 Christgau Robert 2010 The Dean s List The Best Albums of 2009 The Barnes amp Noble Review Archived from the original on August 6 2020 Retrieved June 5 2016 Dantana 2009 Updated Mos Def Presents The Ecstatic Tour ft Jay Electronica Okayplayer Archived from the original on August 4 2016 Retrieved June 6 2016 Daulatzai Sohail 2012 Black Star Crescent Moon The Muslim International and Black Freedom Beyond America U of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0816675869 Diamond Samuel 2013 Yasiin Bey amp Preservation The REcstatic Tiny Mix Tapes Archived from the original on August 8 2016 Retrieved June 13 2016 Diver Mike 2010 BBC Music s Best Albums of 2009 BBC Retrieved May 13 2024 Ducker Jesse June 8 2019 Revisiting Mos Def s The Ecstatic 2009 Albumism Retrieved August 29 2021 Eisinger Dale 2013 The Ecstatic The 50 Best Rap Album Covers of the Past Five Years Complex Archived from the original on June 19 2016 Retrieved June 6 2016 Faughnder Ryan 2009 Top 50 Albums of 2009 Part One No Ripcord Archived from the original on April 15 2016 Retrieved July 11 2015 Fennessey Sean January February 2010 40 Best Albums of 2009 Spin New York p 33 ISSN 0886 3032 Retrieved May 13 2024 via Google Books Ford Winston Stone February 2010 Interview Cognito Mos Def s Documentiarian and curator of Ecstatic Moments The Couch Sessions Retrieved August 29 2018 Gundersen Edna 2009 Mos Def is Most Thoughtful as He Focuses on Myriad Projects USA Today Archived from the original on February 5 2016 Retrieved June 4 2016 Harling Danielle 2009 Drake Mos Def And More Receive Grammy Nominations HipHopDX Archived from the original on March 10 2016 Retrieved February 20 2011 Henderson Eric 2009 Mos Def The Ecstatic Slant Magazine Archived from the original on June 23 2013 Retrieved April 21 2013 Hoard Christian 2009 The Ecstatic Mos Def Review Rolling Stone Archived from the original on June 17 2009 Retrieved April 21 2013 Huff Quentin B 2009 Hip Hop amp the Contrast Principle PopMatters Archived from the original on August 6 2016 Retrieved June 5 2016 Iles Matthew September 14 2009 Woodstock and sports Page 2 connects the dots between 1969 and 2009 ESPN com Retrieved September 9 2020 Jones Steve 2009 Ecstatic Elevates Def s Game USA Today Archived from the original on September 24 2016 Retrieved June 13 2016 Kellman Andy n d The Ecstatic Mos Def AllMusic Archived from the original on March 27 2013 Retrieved April 21 2013 Ketchum III William E November 27 2019 Yasiin Bey Talks Negus Visual Art And Unreleased Music Vibe Retrieved August 29 2021 Keyes J Edward September 30 2009 Austin City Limits 2009 Ultimate Schedule Guide Rolling Stone Archived from the original on September 1 2018 Retrieved September 1 2018 Kot Greg 2009 Turn It Up Album Review Mos Def s The Ecstatic Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on March 9 2012 Retrieved April 21 2013 Lamb Karas 2013 Yasiin Bey amp Preservation Present The REcstatic Okayplayer Retrieved June 13 2016 MacInnes Paul 2009 Mos Def The Ecstatic The Guardian Archived from the original on April 22 2010 Retrieved April 21 2013 Maness Carter 2009 Current TV Follows Mos Def Around Japan The Boombox Archived from the original on July 1 2016 Retrieved June 6 2016 Michaels Sean 2009 Mos Def to Release New Album on a T shirt The Guardian Archived from the original on August 11 2016 Retrieved June 3 2016 Middles Mick 2009 Mos Def The Quietus Archived from the original on July 15 2012 Retrieved April 21 2013 Murray Robin 2010 Mos Def Unveils UK Tour Clash Archived from the original on June 25 2016 Retrieved June 6 2016 Owsinski Bobby 2009 Music 3 0 A Survival Guide for Making Music in the Internet Age Hal Leonard Corporation ISBN 978 1423474012 Patrin Nate May 14 2009 Casa Bey by Mos Def Review Pitchfork Retrieved September 10 2020 Patrin Nate June 10 2009 Mos Def The Ecstatic Pitchfork Archived from the original on April 15 2013 Retrieved April 21 2013 Potton Ed 2009 Mos Def The Ecstatic The Times Archived from the original on March 3 2012 Retrieved January 15 2011 subscription required Rabin Nathan 2009 Mos Def The Ecstatic The A V Club Archived from the original on January 7 2011 Retrieved April 21 2013 Raible Allan 2009 Review Mos Def s The Ecstatic ABC News Archived from the original on August 7 2016 Retrieved June 6 2016 Richman Simmy 2009 Album Mos Def The Ecstatic Downtown The Independent Archived from the original on August 29 2014 Retrieved April 21 2013 Samuel Steven 2008 Mos Def Ecstatic About Upcoming CD SOHH Archived from the original on August 4 2016 Retrieved June 5 2016 Samuel Steven 2009 Mos Def Reveals New Album Details Bringing Back Def Poetry SOHH Archived from the original on August 4 2016 Retrieved June 4 2016 Sawdey Evan August 2021 Music artists who walked away at the top of their game Yardbarker Retrieved August 29 2021 Siehndel Patrick Abel Fabian Diaz Aviles Ernesto Henze Nicola Krause Daniel 2013 Cross Domain Analysis of the Blogosphere for Trend Prediction In Ozyer Tansel Rokne Jon Wagner Gerhard Reuser Arno H P eds The Influence of Technology on Social Network Analysis and Mining Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 3709113462 Slavik Nathan 2009 Mos Def The Ecstatic DJBooth Archived from the original on August 8 2016 Retrieved June 4 2016 Spadine Richard 2009 Mos Def Casa Bey DJBooth Archived from the original on October 24 2016 Retrieved June 5 2016 St John Colin 2009 Review Mos Def Time Out Archived from the original on September 18 2016 Retrieved June 4 2016 Stewart Allison 2009 Music Review Black Eyed Peas The E N D Mos Def s The Ecstatic The Washington Post Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved June 5 2016 Stosuy Brandon 2009 Q s 50 Best Albums Of 2009 Stereogum Archived from the original on February 13 2021 Retrieved May 13 2024 Sundaresan Mano February 5 2020 The Paradox of Yasiin Bey s Negus A Rap Album Trapped in an Art Museum NPR Music Retrieved August 29 2021 Thompson Ben 2009 CD Pop Review Mos Def The Ecstatic The Observer Archived from the original on April 22 2010 Retrieved April 21 2013 Tyrangiel Josh May 18 2009 Mos Def s The Ecstatic Summer Arts Preview Time Retrieved August 29 2018 Vozick Levinson Simon 2009 The Ecstatic Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on March 13 2016 Retrieved June 6 2016 Wappler Margaret June 9 2009 Album review Mos Def s The Ecstatic Pop amp Hiss Retrieved August 29 2018 Young Alex 2009 Mos Def The Ecstatic Consequence of Sound Archived from the original on August 8 2016 Retrieved June 4 2016 Zercoe Cole 2013 BPM 5 The Top 130 Albums Beats Per Minute Retrieved May 13 2024 Further reading editBrie 2013 Yasiin Bey x Preservation The REcstatic Album Stream Okayplayer Retrieved July 13 2021 MissFrolab 2009 Mos Def The Ecstatic Liner Notes in Photos amp Video Frolab Archived from the original on August 8 2016 Retrieved June 6 2016 MissFrolab 2009 Mos Def The Ecstatic Samples amp Originals Frolab Archived from the original on August 8 2016 Retrieved June 5 2016 External links editThe Ecstatic Adobe Flash at Myspace streamed copy where licensed The Ecstatic at Discogs list of releases The REcstatic at Discogs The REcstatic Adobe Flash at HotNewHipHop streamed copy where licensed Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Ecstatic amp oldid 1223651107, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.