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Dr. Octagonecologyst

Dr. Octagonecologyst

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Artist: Dr. Octagon
Label: Dreamworks
Category: Music

List Price: $13.98
Buy New: $9.97
You Save: $4.01 (29%)



New (40) Used (17) Collectible (1) from $5.28

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 114 reviews
Sales Rank: 6764

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 50021
UPC: 600445002128
EAN: 0600445002128
ASIN: B000005AM7

Release Date: April 29, 1997
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Pre-Order (0-0 Business Days)

Tracks:

  • Intro
  • 3000
  • I Got To Tell You
  • Earth People
  • No Awareness
  • Real Raw
  • General Hospital
  • Blue Flowers
  • Technical Difficulties
  • A Visit To The Gynecologyst
  • Bear Witness
  • Dr. Octagon
  • Girl Let Me Touch You
  • I'm Destructive
  • Wild And Crazy
  • Elective Surgery
  • Halfsharkalligatorhalfman
  • Blue Flowers Revisited
  • Waiting List (DJ Shadow/Automator Mix)
  • 1977

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Maybe it was that downtime at Creedmoor Mental Hospital, but after he tuned out following the breakup of the hardheaded seminal hip-hop group the Ultramagnetic MCs, something must have flipped Kool Keith's wig like a mescaline pizza. I can think of no other way to explain the mutant birth of Dr. Octagonecologyst. Literally assuming another personality on this record, Dr. Octagon--Kool Keith on the mike, with Dan "The Automater" Nakamura producing--transmits unearthly rhymes like tractor beams to your cranium. Then he squirms around in there, grabs some Vaseline from your medicine cabinet, and does a little dance. The first time you listen to cuts like "Earth People" and "Blue Flowers," you might have to change the way you listen to hip-hop. The standards are the same--verse, chorus, verse, with plenty of nasty skits in the middle--and there are electro-beat shades of his predecessors, such as Afrika Baambaata, but the wordplay and beat compositions are truly light years from most hip-hop. Listening to this album is like trying to read the glyphs from Stargate. --Todd Levin


Customer Reviews:   Read 109 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Good..not a huge Kool Keith guy   August 9, 2008
Some sick tracks, hip-hop classics even, but more put out for arts sake than anything else.


4 out of 5 stars "Supersonic bionic robot voodoo power!"   July 25, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

The first solo album by underground hip-hop journeyman Keith Matthew Thornton (aka Kool Keith, aka Dr. Dooom, aka Mr. Nogatco, aka Black Elvis, aka Crazy Lou, aka Big Willie Smith, aka Willie Biggs, aka Dr. Octagon) is a beloved touchstone of the left-of-center (and sub-of-terranean) rap community. It's a record that sounds simultaneously unlike and eerily similar to its more commercially successful brethren, a collection of loping, ludicrous boasts maneuvering their way over and around a maze of beats and loops. Like most rap albums, Dr. Octagonecologyst is organized around a loose concept- namely, the glorification and self-mythologizing of its star MC. The difference is that instead of bragging about the many uses he has for his penis, Dr. Octagon wants to tell us all about his proficiency in time travel, his bizarre medical experiments, and his feces-shooting space gun. You see, Dr. O is not your typical hip-hop persona. He's not an Uzi toting thug or a drug pushing pimp daddy. No, no, no, our dear eight-sided doctor is in fact a time-traveling gynecologist whose mission in life is to take as many of our women to bed as he possibly can. Oh, and did I mention he's from Jupiter? Yeah, he's from Jupiter.

Just hear me out for a second.

This album is way better than it has any right to be. That probably has something to do with Keith's unorthodox but undeniable talent. His lyrics are, in a very postmodern sort of way, everything that rap lyrics should be: clever, aggressive, assertive, grandstanding, and eminently quotable, full of unexpected similes and pop culture references. The good doctor juxtaposes abstract ideas and phallic filth, complex declarations and childish non-sequiters. B-movie schlock slices through discussions of quantum physics. Technical jargon sits comfortably alongside over-the-top space opera. Sex and science unite! Keith's also a damn good rapper: His technique is as weird and wonderful as his lyrics, a ghostly but authoritative croon that twists its way around the words with an odd sort of nervous energy. There's a sense of discomfort in the rapper's style- his rhythm is wobbly and unstable, difficult to really grab a hold of. And yet it never sounds contrived or amateurish; it's all just so freaking right.

Throw in a great minimalist production from Dan "The Automator" Nakamura (which features a bevy of ghostly, trip-hoppish beats and medical porn samples), and you've got a fine piece of weirdo rap.

Like a lot of hip-hop albums, Dr. Octagonecologyst suffers from its length- it starts off brilliant but runs out of steam about halfway through. Really, there's not much worth listening to after "Girl Let Me Touch You." Nothing terrible, of course, just nothing to really justify the album's sixty-five minute running time. Still, there's plenty of awesome stuff here.



4 out of 5 stars Kool Keith's Twisted Perspective   March 29, 2008
I'd like to first address that even though Dan The Automator handled the production on this album, that doesn't mean it's going to sound anything like Deltron 3030. That's a whole different league, folks.

"Dr. Octagonecologyst" is an album from one of the many alter egos of Kool Keith, a member of the Ultramagnetic MC's. But this isn't anything like Kool Keith has ever done. This album helped to establish the dark, demented side of rap. Kool Keith was a patient at Bellevue Hospital Center, which he claimed as an inside joke, but nonetheless, this was a great influence on this album.

The lyrics are X-Rated and usually deal with the human anatomy and other abstract and sadistic details. It can be too much for some, but if you dig this style, you'll love what Kool Keith has to offer. The flow isn't super spectacular, but it gets the job done. If there's anything I enjoy most about this album, it's the production. It's a completely different perspective for Dan The Automator, with dark and spacey beats meant for this, along with scratching provided by Q-Bert. DJ Shadow even appears on "Waiting List" for a little surprise.

This isn't an album for the feeble minded, but if you want something that breaks away from your average hip-hop, then by all means check this out.



4 out of 5 stars Great sound, poor lyrics   December 4, 2007
After hearing the instrumentalist version of Dr. Octagon, I blindly decided to by this album. I did enjoy it; it provides quirky beats along with interesting/strange skits. However, alot of the lyrics don't rhyme, which is one thing I do like when it comes to rap. The lyrics are essentially incomprehensible. Yes, it's English all right, but nothing he seems to say makes any sense, as there is no real, general theme to follow. I would definitely recommend this album to people who are looking for something different. Not traditional rap, rather a science fiction movie style hip hop CD.


1 out of 5 stars Sub mediocre   November 14, 2007
 1 out of 5 found this review helpful

Let's get right to it: The vocals on this album are HORRIBLE. Absolutely horrific. It's like listening to a dying cat blast diarrhea directly into your eardrum. I guess this is just a matter of personal preference, but I CANNOT STAND this guy's voice, and I simply cannot understand how anyone could find it to be pleasant to listen to. I'd rather listen to a duet featuring Gilbert Godfrey and Bobcat Goldthwait than this garbage.

The beats are okay, but aren't anywhere near brilliant.

The repetitive lyrics are obnoxious and grating, "Earth people, I am from jupiter, Earth people, I am from jupiter, Earth people, I am from jupiter, blah blah blah..." AWFUL!

I bought this cd back in 2000 because I was told that "if you love Deltron 3030, Dr. Octagonecologyst is gonna blow your mind!" Whoever told me that was smoking something far better than whatever I was smoking at the time, because the only thing this pile of trash blew was my faith in the hip hop music industry.

Every year or so I end up putting this cd back in my cd player (the surface has a scratch on it, so I can't sell the damned thing to a cd shop) and giving it one more try... you know, just in case I was "too young for it" the first time I heard it. Every time I get about 3 songs into the cd before my verdict comes back loud and clear: "Nope, your ears were fine back then, this CD still sucks!"

Absolute trash. Buy Deltron, buy older Del, buy the Dilated Peoples, the Spooks, J-5, Slick Rick, Kool G Rap, Binary Star... really, buy whatever hip hop you want, just DO NOT BUY THIS TRASH!


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