Salt N Pepa


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Salt-N-Pepa
Very Necessary
Release Date: 1993 10 12
Running Time: 50:59
Label: Universal Distribution
Rating:

Salt-N-Pepa exhibited a lot of growth on Blacks' Magic (1990), their third album and, by far, best to date. For their follow-up, Very Necessary, released a long three and a half years later, in 1993, the ladies delivered a fairly similar album. Like its predecessor, Very Necessary boasts a pair of major hits ("Whatta Man," "Shoop") and a lot of fine album tracks. Also like Blacks' Magic, Very Necessary is filled with strong, prideful rhetoric: femininity, sex, relationships, romance, respect, love -- these are the key topics, and they're a world apart from those of the gangsta rap that was so popular circa 1993. And as always, the productions are dance-oriented, with a contemporary R&B edge. Most tracks were produced by Hurby "Luvbug" Azor, though Salt is credited on a few, chief among them "Shoop." Very Necessary is just as impressive as Blacks' Magic, if not more so. The key difference is, Blacks' Magic was a striking leap forward for Salt-N-Pepa, who were somewhat of a novelty act up to that point, whereas Very Necessary is a consolidation of everything that had worked so well for the duo previously. Hence the lack of surprises here. Still, the raised expectations don't change the fact that Very Necessary is one of the standout -- and, for sure, one of the most refreshingly unique -- rap albums of its era. Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide

Tracks:
TitleComposerTime
1Groove Me4:21
2No One Does It Better3:53
3Somebody's Gettin' on My Nerves3:57
4Whatta ManAzor5:07
5None of Your BusinessAzor3:32
6Step3:10
7ShoopDenton, Turner, Martin, Roberts, James4:07
8Heaven or Hell4:43
9Big Shot3:47
10Sexy Noises Turn Me On3:54
11Somma Time ManWynn, James3:25
12Break of Dawn3:45
13I've Got AIDS (PSA)3:18







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