ReviewsIncluded in Rolling Stone's "Essential Recordings of the 90's.", "...In recent years they've managed to hit new heights of musical sophistication without ever compromising the geekoid charm that is at the heart of their cool...", 4 stars out of 5 -- "A mix of hard-edged funk, punk thrash and noodling instrumentals, but with tentative signs of maturity...", 4 Stars - Excellent - "...Their mission remains intact: to explore the unifying threads between hip-hop and punk, taking their basic elements--the scratch of a needle across a vinyl groove, a pounding snare-bass thump, the crunch of a power chord--and slicing them up with a ginsu knife....", Ranked #15 in the Village Voice's 1994 Pazz & Jop Critics Poll., Included in Q Magazine's "90 Best Albums of the 1990s.", Ranked #2 in the Village Voice's 1993 Pazz & Jop Critics Poll., Ranked #54 in Mojo's "100 Modern Classics" -- "Swapping their metal-thieving brat-rap for a most hyperactively eclectic maturity...", 8 - Excellent - "...ILL COMMUNICATION is a deliberately positive noise that encourages us to start taking responsibility for a change...", Ranked #19 in Spin's list of the `20 Best Albums Of '94' - "...spice their trademark Toucan-Sam style wise-cracking with jazz samples....and Meters-meets-Santana instrumental chillouts, while 'Sabotage' is flat-out the best hard rock song of the year...", "...it's the most tantalizing ear candy in years, the incessantly inventive sound of brats dismantling pop and trying to reassemble it in their own ingeniously klutzy ways....ILL COMMUNICATION is a cacophony of sleazy wah-wah guitars, voices screaming out from alleys behind buildings, and other joyful chaos, and the Beasties revel in it like kids in a crammed, smelly playground...." - Rating: B, Ranked #3 in Nme's List of the `Top 50 Albums of 1994.', "Everything -- lyrics, samples and production -- locks seamlessly, giving rise to the group's most mature and satisfying album.", "ILL COMMUNICATION is the album that let them infuse their turn towards sincerity with a renewed sense of playfulness, solidifying their transition from the gleefully exaggerated bad-boy anarchists of their first two albums to a trio of (slightly) more mature, trend-setting enthusiasts."
Number of Audio ChannelsStereo