Stakes Is High


title: "Stakes Is High" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["de-la-soul-albums", "1996-albums", "tommy-boy-records-albums", "albums-produced-by-j-dilla", "warner-records-albums"] topic_path: "arts/music" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stakes_Is_High" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::data[format=table title="Infobox album"]

FieldValue
nameStakes Is High
typestudio
artistDe La Soul
coverStakes is High album cover.jpg
releasedJuly 2, 1996
recorded
genreEast Coast hip hop
length68:19
label{{flatlist
prev_titleBuhloone Mindstate
prev_year1993
next_titleArt Official Intelligence: Mosaic Thump
next_year2000
misc{{Singles
nameStakes Is High
typeStudio album
single1Stakes Is High
single1dateJune 17, 1996
single2Itzsoweezee (Hot)
single2date1996
single34 More
single3date1997
::

| name = Stakes Is High | type = studio | artist = De La Soul | cover = Stakes is High album cover.jpg | alt = | released = July 2, 1996 | recorded = | studio = | genre = East Coast hip hop | length = 68:19 | label = {{flatlist|

Stakes Is High is the fourth studio album by American hip hop group De La Soul. It was released on July 2, 1996, through Tommy Boy Records. The album marked a change in the group's sound and direction, as it was their first release not produced in collaboration with Prince Paul. Stakes Is High was mainly produced by the group themselves, with additional tracks provided by Jay Dee, DJ Ogee, Spearhead X and Skeff Anslem. It is considered the group's darkest and most serious album. It received mostly strong reviews but little commercial success.

History

Stakes Is High marked the first time De La Soul did not collaborate with longtime producer Prince Paul on an album, as the group felt that the production he turned in for it didn't match the album's mood.

Stakes Is High deals with many topics, including the state of hip-hop, the commercialization of hip-hop culture, and criticism of gangsta rap. Rapper 2Pac later retaliated on the song "Against All Odds" from his posthumous 1996 album The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory (as well as the unreleased song "Watch Ya Mouth" recorded during the same sessions). Naughty By Nature member Treach also took serious offense at the record, creating a feud that only died down after about a decade and a half after Stakes Is High was released.

Stakes Is High helped introduce rapper Mos Def to a wider audience, on the track "Big Brother Beat". Common also makes an appearance on "The Bizness".

After the album's release, the group toured extensively and remained rather quiet before returning in 2000 with the first installment of their "Art Official Intelligence" series, Mosaic Thump.

Interludes

Like other De La Soul albums, Stakes Is High has a running theme, which in this case is the group's concern about the state of rap, as well as the state of hip hop culture and how it is regarded in general. The following sound clips are featured:

  • The introduction track begins with various clips of interviews, the interviewees describing where they were when they first heard the influential rap album Criminal Minded.
  • At the end of track 9, "Long Island Degrees", a "redneck" explains why he hates rap music ("There's no music in it. It's just niggers talking.")
  • At the end of track 10, "Betta Listen", there is a clip of Posdnuos and Maseo discussing an error in communication about a club.
  • At the end of track 15, "Pony Ride"—an excerpt from the documentary Crumb, in which Maxon Crumb discusses his struggle living on the streets, describing his periods of optimism and depression. Of his situation, he remarks, "Stakes is high".
  • The beginning and end of track 16, "Stakes is High", feature sound clips of people playing dice. A man nearby discusses the O. J. Simpson trials.
  • The clip at the end of the final track, "Sunshine", closes the album with a young man saying "Yo, when I first heard 3 Feet High and Rising, I was" and then the clip is cut out in similar fashion to "Fight the Power" in Public Enemy's legendary album, Fear of a Black Planet. 3 Feet High and Rising was De La Soul's first release and a very influential album, held in similarly high regard as Criminal Minded, which is discussed at the beginning of the album.

Critical reception

Robert Christgau wrote: "After almost four years, Posdnuos and company emerge from the ether like the long-lost friends they are. Their wordplay assured in its subtle smarts, their delivery unassuming in its quick, unmacho mumble, their cultural awareness never smug about its balance, they bind up an identifiable feeling in an identifiable sound, and just about every one of the 17 tracks comes equipped with a solid beat and a likable hook or chorus. It's a relief to have them back. But it's never a revelation."

Track listing

| extra_column = Producer(s) | total_length = 68:19

| title1 = Intro | writer1 = | extra1 = De La Soul | length1 = 2:35

| title2 = Supa Emcees | writer2 = | extra2 = De La Soul | length2 = 3:40

| title3 = The Bizness | writer3 = | extra3 = De La Soul | note3 = featuring Common Sense | length3 = 5:41

| title4 = Wonce Again Long Island | writer4 = | extra4 = De La Soul | length4 = 3:39

| title5 = Dinninit | writer5 = | extra5 = Spearhead X | length5 = 4:20

| title6 = Brakes | writer6 = | extra6 = De La Soul | length6 = 4:06

| title7 = Dog Eat Dog | writer7 = | extra7 = De La Soul | length7 = 3:40

| title8 = Baby Baby Baby Baby Ooh Baby | writer8 = | extra8 = De La Soul | length8 = 2:10

| title9 = Long Island Degrees | writer9 = | extra9 = De La Soul | length9 = 3:27

| title10 = Betta Listen | writer10 = | extra10 = De La Soul | length10 = 4:28

| title11 = Itzsoweezee (Hot) | writer11 = | extra11 = De La Soul | length11 = 4:55

| title12 = 4 More | writer12 = | extra12 = | note12 = featuring Zhané | length12 = 4:18

| title13 = Big Brother Beat | writer13 = | extra13 = Skeff Anselm | note13 = featuring Mos Def | length13 = 3:42

| title14 = Down Syndrome | writer14 = | extra14 = De La Soul | length14 = 3:28

| title15 = Pony Ride | writer15 = | extra15 = De La Soul | note15 = featuring Truth Enola | length15 = 5:26

| title16 = Stakes Is High | writer16 = | extra16 = | length16 = 5:30

| title17 = Sunshine | writer17 = | extra17 = De La Soul | length17 = 3:39

Notes

  • indicates an additional producer.
  • "Baby Baby Baby Baby Ooh Baby" features additional vocals by the Jazzyfatnastees.
  • The streaming version of the album divides "The Bizness" into two tracks, "The Bizness" and "Yunonstop".

Charts

Weekly charts

::data[format=table] | Chart (1996) | Peak position | Australian Albums (ARIA) | |---|---|---| | 105 | | | ::

::data[format=table] | Chart (2023) | Peak position | |---|---| ::

Year-end charts

::data[format=table]

Chart (1996)PositionUS Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)
74
::

References

References

  1. (October 20, 2017). "50 Greatest East Coast Hip-Hop Albums of the 1990s". [[The Boombox]].
  2. Thomas, Vincent. "''Stakes Is High'' – De La Soul". [[AllMusic]].
  3. Smith, Ethan. (July 12, 1996). "''Stakes Is High''".
  4. Ashon, Wil. (July 1996). "De La Soul: ''Stakes Is high''".
  5. Cigarettes, Johnny. (July 29, 1996). "De La Soul – ''Stakes Is High''".
  6. (20 July 2002). "De La Soul - Stakes Is High - Tommy Boy (RapReviews "Back to the Lab" series)".
  7. Sprague, David. (August 8, 1996). "''Stakes Is High''".
  8. Caramanica, Jon. (2004). "[[The Rolling Stone Album Guide". [[Simon & Schuster]].
  9. Salamon, Jeff. (August 1996). "De La Soul: ''Stakes Is High''".
  10. (18 June 2009). "De La Soul - Stakes Is High".
  11. Christgau, Robert. (July 23, 1996). "Consumer Guide". [[The Village Voice]].
  12. "Robert Christgau: CG: de la soul".
  13. (July 2, 1996). "Stakes Is High".
  14. "De La Soul ARIA chart history (albums) to 2024". ARIA.
  15. "Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums – Year-End 1996".

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