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AOI: Bionix

AOI: Bionix
37530 de la soul - aoi bionix a.jpg
Studio album by De La Soul
Released December 4, 2001
Recorded 2000-2001
Genre Hip hop
Length 55:15
Label Tommy Boy/Warner Bros. Records
01362
Producer De La Soul, Supa Dave West, Kev Brown, Megahertz, J Dilla, Deaf 2 U Inc.,
De La Soul chronology
Art Official Intelligence: Mosaic Thump
(2000)
AOI: Bionix
(2001)
Live at Tramps, NYC, 1996
(2004)
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic 77/100
Review scores
Source Rating
About.com 4.5/5 stars
Allmusic 4.5/5 stars
Entertainment Weekly B+
HipHopDX.com 4.5/5 stars
Robert Christgau A
Rolling Stone 4/5 stars
USA Today 3.5/4 stars
Vibe 4/5 stars

AOI: Bionix is De La Soul's sixth full-length album, released in December 2001. The album was the second in a planned three-disc installment, which was originally intended to be a three-disc album. This was the last De La project released on Tommy Boy before the label became defunct.

The first single, "Baby Phat" featuring Yummy Bingham and Devin the Dude, was an ode to larger sized women. Elsewhere, "Held Down", featuring Cee-Lo, found Posdnuos in an introspective mood as he mused on fatherhood, religion, and fame. Slick Rick also made an appearance on "What We Do (For Love)"; a humorous song about puberty and sexual discovery. Plans were made to release the Kev Brown-produced "Special" (featuring Yummy Bingham) as the second single, however Tommy Boy soon folded as a label, cutting short any further promotion of Bionix. Like many Hip-Hop albums, there is an official instrumental version of the album available on vinyl, with artwork.

The album featured skits with a character by the name of Reverend Do Good, which worked as social commentary as well as the intros and outros of the songs. The final Reverend Do Good skit acts as one final advertisement for Ghost Weed as heard on De La Soul's previous album, Art Official Intelligence: Mosaic Thump. A mischievous teenager takes a hit of the substance, then morphs into Slum Village frontman J Dilla, who provides the intro and outro to the marijuana-themed song "Peer Pressure" (which he also produced).

Unless Otherwise Noted, Information is taken from Discogs.com


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