Triggernometry | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | July 22, 2003 (EU) August 12, 2003 (US) | |||
Recorded | 2002-2003 | |||
Studio | OPM Studios (Los Angeles, California) | |||
Genre | East Coast Hip Hop, Hardcore Hip Hop, Gangsta Rap | |||
Length | 48:18 | |||
Label | D3 Entertainment | |||
Producer | Kronic Tones Dominche (co-producer) Hector Delgado (co-producer) Fredro Starr (executive) Sticky Fingaz (executive) Omar "Iceman" Sharif (executive) | |||
Onyx chronology | ||||
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Singles from Triggernometry | ||||
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Triggernometry is the fifth album from hardcore rap group Onyx, released on July 22, 2003, by D3 Entertainment. The whole album was produced by Kronic Tones. The album features appearances by American rappers T Hussle, Genovese, Begetz, X1, Bad Luck, Dirty Getinz. The album peaked at No. 66 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums music chart.
Background
Triggernometry is an album consisting of 10 new tracks and 11 stories from the life of the group Onyx, told by the group members themselves in the gap between the songs. All the songs were produced by one producer Kronic Tones, who had already produced 7 tracks for Fredro Starr's second solo album Don't Get Mad Get Money. The album was criticized by the fans of the group Onyx, who believe that such production is suitable only for nightclubs, but not for the streets.[1][2] Originally, the album was due out on October 31 under the title Triggernometry: The Study of Guns, but later the name was shortened to Triggernometry, and the album was released earlier.[3][4]
Singles
The one and only single, "Mama Cryin'/Wild N Here" featuring X1, Begetz, Dirty Getinz, Bad Luck was released in 2003.
Critical response
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
Rate Your Music | [5] |
AllMusic | [6] |
In 2003, the editor of the Russian online newspaper NewsLab.ru, Mitya Meshalkin, praised the album, adding that Triggernometry, despite the frightening (a mixture of the words "trigger" and "trigonometry") name, had noticeably less street negligence and noticeably more "musicality".[7]
In 2003, RapReviews.com editor Steve "Flash" Juon gave the album a 4 out of 10, calling it "pathetic attempt to relive past Onyx glories". The author also noted that Sticky exhibits the same problem he did on "Decade," namely that he sounds tired and unenthused, like he's going through the motions. Sticky and Fredro seem equally uninterested in resurrecting the name Onyx and shouldn't have even tried.[8]
Track listing
# | track | featured guest(s) | producer(s) | length |
---|---|---|---|---|
01. | "Trigonometry Intro" | 0:58 | ||
02. | "Gun Clap Music" | Kronic Tones | 4:08 | |
03. | "Stick Up" | 0:27 | ||
04. | "JMJ" | Kronic Tones | 4:10 | |
05. | "Def Scams" | 0:39 | ||
06. | "Street Is Us" | T Hussle | Kronic Tones | 2:52 |
07. | "Source Awards" | 1:04 | ||
08. | "Wild N Here" | Kronic Tones | 3:58 | |
09. | "'93 Flex" | 0:39 | ||
10. | "O.N.Y.X. RMX" | Genovese | Kronic Tones, Dominche (co-producer) | 3:54 |
11. | "Wu Da Competition" | 1:06 | ||
12. | "Over" | Begetz | Kronic Tones, Hector Delgado (co-producer) | 4:13 |
13. | "B.I.G." | 1:17 | ||
14. | "Look Dog" | X1 | Kronic Tones | 3:16 |
15. | "Irv Da A&R" | 0:53 | ||
16. | "Da Next, Pt. 2" | Kronic Tones | 3:42 | |
17. | "Rappers in Flicks" | 0:31 | ||
18. | "Champions" | X1 | Kronic Tones | 3:23 |
19. | "Holla Back 50" | 2:30 | ||
20. | "Mama Cryin" | X1, Begetz, Dirty Getinz & Bad Luck | Kronic Tones | 4:01 |
21. | "Trigonometry (Outro)" | 0:37 | ||
Samples
Gun Clap Music
- "Calypso Rock" by Original Tropicana Steel Band
O.N.Y.X. (Unreleased Original Version)
- "You're a Big Girl Now" by The Stylistics (1970)
Leftover tracks
Songs that were recorded in 2002-2003 during the "Triggernometry" sessions but cut from the final album:
- "Gun Clap Music" (Original)
- "Wild In Here" (Demo Version)
- "O.N.Y.X."
- "Over (feat. Begetz)" (Demo Version)
Personnel
Credits for Triggernometry adapted from AllMusic and CD booklet.[9][10]
- Onyx - performer, vocals
- Fredro Starr - performer, vocals, executive producer
- Sticky Fingaz - performer, vocals, executive producer
- Sonny Seeza - performer, vocals
- Omar "Iceman" Sharif — executive producer
- T Hussle — guest artist
- Genovese — guest artist
- Begetz — guest artist
- X1 — guest artist
- Bad Luck — guest artist
- Dirty Getinz — guest artist
- Kronic Tones — producer
- Dominche — co-producer
- Hector Delgado — recording, mixing, co-producer
- Brian Porizek — artwork, design
- Aldy Damian — label direction
Charts
Chart (2003) | Peak position |
---|---|
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums[11][12] | 66 |
References
- ↑ "Sagen ihre Meinung zu 50 Cent, Wu-Tang, Biggie und Irv Gotti". laut.de. Retrieved 2018-08-04.
- ↑ "VIBE Magazine (September, 2003)". Retrieved 2018-08-04.
- ↑ "Sticky Fingaz made EW's It List (by EW STAFF) (June 19, 2003)". ew.com. Retrieved 2018-09-01.
- ↑ "Onyx Member Loses Cancer Battle (by Deniece "Boxx Girl" Mason) (May 28, 2003)". hiphopdx.com. Retrieved 2018-09-01.
- ↑ Rate Your Music Review
- ↑ AllMusic Review
- ↑ "Торопимся за Сетцером, пожинаем плоды шестилетнего ожидания, забавляемся гангста-рэпом". newslab.ru. Retrieved 2021-01-01.
- ↑ "Onyx :: Triggernometry :: D3 Entertainment/Riviera Ent". rapreviews.com. Retrieved 2021-01-01.
- ↑ Triggernometry credits adapted from the AllMusic review
- ↑ Credits for Triggernometry
- ↑ "Billboard October 4, 2003". Retrieved 2018-08-12.
- ↑ "Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard) September 27, 2003". billboard.com. Archived from the original on August 13, 2018. Retrieved 2018-08-04.
External links