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Sons of the P

Sons of the P is the second studio album by American hip hop group Digital Underground. It was released on October 15, 1991, via Tommy Boy Records. The recording sessions took place at Starlight Sound in Richmond, with additional recordings done at Unique Recording Studios in New York, Axiom Recorders in Tampa, and The Disc Ltd. in Detroit. The album was produced by the Underground Production Squad. It features contributions from George Clinton, Stretch, and Treach.

Critical reception
Musician said that "this hour of power pulses with fat, spacious grooves, the kind you feel from head to toe...Throughout, funk serves as a truth ray, zapping racism and hypocrisy with thumping beats". Q critic gave the album 3 stars out of 5, saying that the album "had booty-shifting basslines to rival George Clinton and some engagingly daft lyrics". In his "Consumer Guide" column for The Village Voice, Robert Christgau wrote that "you can wear out the hard and the brother-brother-brother, but you can't wear out the cosmic slop", highlighting songs "The DFLO Shuffle" and "Kiss You Back". In retrospective reviews, DJ Fatboy of RapReviews compared the album to the group's previous work, saying "Sex Packets is the more popular album, but Sons of the P is the more worthwile offering", stating "album expands and goes deeper than its predecessor, and to this day, still stands as the best effort Digital Underground ever put on wax". ==Track listing==
Track listing
;Sample credits • Track 2 contains a sample of "Freak of the Week" as performed by Funkadelic. • Track 6 contains a sample of "(Not Just) Knee Deep" as performed by Funkadelic. • Track 7 contains a sample of "One Nation Under a Groove" as performed by Funkadelic. • Track 9 contains a sample of "Family Affair" as performed by Sly and the Family Stone. ==Personnel==
Personnel
• Gregory "Shock G" Jacobs — rap vocals, singing, acoustic piano, digital keyboards, synthesizer, drum programming, sampler, sequencing, producer, mixing, executive producer, concept, illustration • Ronald "Money-B" Brooks — rap vocals • Ramone "Pee-Wee" Gooden — rap vocals, singing, digital keyboards, synthesizer • Blocko — rap vocals, singing • Randy "Stretch" Walker — rap vocals • Tupac "2Pac" Shakur — rap vocals • "Bigg Money Odis" Brackens III — rap vocals • Stuart "Shorty B" Jordan — rap vocals • Descaro "Mack Mone" Moore — rap vocals • Mark "M.C. Clever" Moore — rap vocals • Shirley "Shassiah" Tabor — rap vocals • Ronald "Omar" Everett — rap vocals • Ken "Kenny K" Waters — rap vocals • Master Mind — rap vocals • D-Love — rap vocals • O.B. — rap vocals • The God Rakiem — rap vocals • George Clinton Jr. — singing • Earl "Schmoovy-Schmoov" Cook — singing • Boni Boyer — singing • Roniece Levias — singing • Jeremy "Jay-Z" Jackson — additional vocals, drum programming, sampler, sequencing, turntables (track 5) • Marlon "Dr. Illenstein" Kemp — additional vocals, concept • Anthony "Treach" Criss — additional vocals • Otis Dunn — additional vocals • The Conditioner — guitar • Juan Carlos — live percussion • Deon "Big D the Impossible" Evans — drum programming, sampler, sequencing • David "DJ Fuze" Elliot — turntables • 2Fly-Eli — turntables (track 9) • Darrin Harris — recording & mixing (tracks: 1–4, 6–11) • Steve Counter — recording (tracks: 1–4, 6–11) • Marc Senasac — recording & mixing (track 5) • Jeff Gray — mixing assistant (tracks: 1–4, 6–11) • Lynn Levy — mixing assistant (tracks: 1–4, 6–11) • Malcolm Sherwood — recording & mixing assistant (track 5) • Atron Gregory — executive producer • Mark Weinberg — art direction • Victor Hall — cover photo ==Charts==
Charts
Weekly charts Year-end charts ==Certifications==
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