J DillaDonuts

Label:

Stones Throw Records – STH 2126

Format:

CD , Album

Country:

US

Released:

Genre:

Hip Hop

Style:

Instrumental

Tracklist

1 Donuts (Outro) 0:12
2 Workinonit 2:57
3 Waves 1:38
4 Light My Fire 0:35
5 The New 0:49
6 Stop 1:39
7 People 1:24
8 The Diff'rence 1:52
9 Mash 1:31
10 Time: The Donut Of The Heart 1:38
11 Glazed 1:21
12 Airworks 1:44
13 Lightworks 1:55
14 Stepson Of The Clapper 1:01
15 The Twister (Huh, What) 1:16
16 One Eleven 1:11
17 Two Can Win 1:47
18 Don't Cry 1:59
19 Anti-American Graffiti 1:53
20 Geek Down 1:19
21 Thunder 0:54
22 Gobstopper 1:05
23 One For Ghost 1:18
24 Dilla Says Go 1:16
25 Walkinonit 1:15
26 The Factory 1:23
27 U-Love 1:00
28 Hi. 1:16
29 Bye. 1:27
30 Last Donut Of The Night 1:39
31 Welcome To The Show 1:11

Credits

  • ProducerJ Dilla

Notes

Some versions of this release come in an outer slipcase that lists track 31's title as "Donuts (Intro)".

Other Versions (5 of 39)

View All
Title (Format) Label Cat# Country Year
New Submission
Donuts (CD, Album, Promo) Stones Throw Records STH2126-P US 2005
New Submission
Donuts (CDr, Promo) Stones Throw Records STH2126-P US 2005
Recently Edited
Donuts (2×12", 33 ⅓ RPM, Album) Stones Throw Records STH2126 US 2006
Recently Edited
Donuts (CD, Album) [PIAS] STH 2126, 499.2126.020 Europe 2006
Recently Edited
Donuts (CD, Album) Stones Throw Records STH2126 US 2006

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Reviews

  • Redlove73's avatar
    Redlove73
    Turn it up!!!
    • glenncassis's avatar
      glenncassis
      One of the 20 greatest hip hop albums of all time. A case study in music creativity and engineering.
      • HrtAttK's avatar
        HrtAttK
        Edited 13 years ago
        Damn.....After all this time the sound still holds. I talking to my best friend when he called me at the intersection of 118 and middlebrook and told me that Jay Dee ed. I am listening to this album as I write this and wow!!!!!! There was nothing to sur this since this was released. I can't describe this. I tried explaining this to someone who never heard of this album and said, "imagine you were going to die and what it would sound like." I think that is a good explanation from a hip-hop perspective along with the hotness of this release. There is a reason years upon years this release is still relevant. I just purchased this digital release again to hear it and rip it as I am too lazy to search through my collection for this. Worth every penny. Do not hesitate. Hip Hop at its finest!!!!! Who needs lyricists when the beats sound this good. The sound is still personal and accessible at the same time. FYI JJ Doom. Say no more.
        • Apeman
          This album is a masterpiece

          Well, that's the short review - but I must say, this record is just one incredible journey though sound, and the use of sampling is done really well. All of the tracks are usually about 1.5/2 minutes long, and time just flies by while listening to it.

          It is such a shame he ed away almost straight after this wonderful record was released. Still - this was one amazing swan-song for one of the finest producers in hip-hop.

          Easily one of the finest records of the last decade.

          R.I.P. J-Dilla, your productions are too amazing for words!
          • pipecock's avatar
            pipecock
            Edited 18 years ago
            I've been a fan of Jay Dee since he was making beats for the Pharcyde and Tribe back in the 90's. I picked up his first solo album "Welcome 2 Detroit" when it came out, and it is undeniably a classic. However, nothing before Donuts led me to believe that the man would come through with something like this. Donuts is remarkable in many ways. The idea of a beat tape with many short tracks doesn't seem immediately listenable, yet the cohesiveness of this album is superb. While it is hiphop, it is also psychedelic and very melancholic as well. The range of emotion expressed with some records and a sampler is completely insane. This is inarguably his masterwork, something that will be inspiring beat heads and hiphop fans for years, but it will also be accessible to the every day music fan as well because of it's great emotional power. One of the classic albums from the '00s.....
            • Starborough's avatar
              Starborough
              Edited 19 years ago
              Donuts is a 31 track long soul drenched hiphop collage that might appear fragmented upon first listen, but turns into a really coherent album when played more often. Catchy hooks and psychedelic noises follow eachother in a high pace, without the album losing it's flow.
              Dilla takes hiphop to a higher level. A great legacy of an extremely talented producer, that unfortunately died on a very young age.
              Well recommended for anyone into (instrumental) hiphop, but also a must have for lovers of Detroit house in the Andres or Moodymann style.

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