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I Don't Know (Slum Village song)

Fantastic, Vol. 2
SV fantastic.jpg
Studio album by Slum Village
Released June 13, 2000
Recorded 1997−1998
Genre Hip hop
Length 67:54
Label GoodVibe
Producer Jay Dee, Pete Rock, D'Angelo
Slum Village chronology
Fan-Tas-Tic (Vol. 1) (1997) (Bootleg)String Module Error: Match not foundString Module Error: Match not found Fantastic, Vol. 2
(2000)
Best Kept Secret
(2000)Best Kept Secret2000
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 4/5 stars
Alternative Press 4/5
Entertainment Weekly B+
Muzik 5/5 stars
NME 6/10
Okayplayer 5/5 stars
Pitchfork 8.5/10
Rolling Stone 3.5/5 stars
The Source 3.5/5
Spin 5/10

Fantastic, Vol. 2 (also referred to as Fantastic Volume II) is the second album by American hip hop group Slum Village, released on June 13, 2000. During the time of its release the group was still composed of its earliest members T3, Baatin and J Dilla.

The album was initially completed in 1998 for A&M Records shortly before the label became obsolete, leaving Slum Village in limbo for over a year. During this period, however, the group's producer Jay Dilla greatly increased his profile through work with artists such as Common, Busta Rhymes, Erykah Badu and A Tribe Called Quest. At the same time tremendous acclaim from notables such as Questlove of The Roots and Q-Tip built up anticipation for the long-delayed LP.

Slum Village eventually found an outlet with Goodvibe Recordings & Barak Records, and released Fantastic, Vol. 2 in summer 2000. Although sales were slow (due to heavy bootlegging) the group nevertheless had a huge impact on the underground circuit and were proclaimed torch-bearers for the departing A Tribe Called Quest.

In particular Jay Dee's much lauded production work, full of subtle grooves and soul claps, was a blueprint for the direction that neo soul would take in the coming years. The album was re-released minus the original version of "Fall-N-Love", which was replaced by the remix due to sample clearance issues, as well as their collaboration with Common, "Thelonius" (which originally appeared on Common's Like Water for Chocolate).


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