Mama Said Knock You Out by LL Cool J

Mama Said Knock You Out

LL Cool J

2.9
Rating
21395
Votes
1
8%
2
25%
3
41%
4
21%
5
5%
Distribution

Album Summary

Mama Said Knock You Out is the fourth studio album by American rapper LL Cool J. It was produced mostly by Marley Marl and recorded at his "House of Hits" home studio in Chestnut Ridge and at Chung King House of Metal in New York City. After the disappointing reception of LL Cool's 1989 album Walking with a Panther, Mama Said Knock You Out was released by Def Jam Recordings on September 14, 1990 to commercial and critical success.

Wikipedia Read more on Wikipedia

Rating Over Time

Per Year Cumulative

Reviews

Sort by: Popular Date Random
Rating: All 5★ 4★ 3★ 2★ 1★
Length: All Short Long

Better actor than rapper. And he is not a good actor.

LL breaks new ground and pioneers "sexy rap". NWA talks about bitches. Beastie Boys want girs to do their laundry. LL is here to wear a Kangol hat give your girl a dozen orgasms. Fun and very consistent album. B

The album is too long, and a lot of the material either didn't age well ("I sure wouldn't rape you" as a pickup line? Yikes) or is super corny (Milky Cereal, among others). There is no denying the power of the title track, though. Best track: Mama Said Knock You Out

I knocked out Bald Bull during his bull charge in Mike Tyson's punch out right after "Don't call it a comeback"

Having just gotten to Mr. Good Bar, I have to ask... how can anyone find this anything but incredibly cringey? Some hip-hop acts from this era have aged pretty well... Rakim, Run-DMC... but the punchiest moments on this album feel like Will Smith trying to be Ice Cube.

I'd rather have mama knock me out than listen to this shitload of crap again.

Such a clear portrait of the transition from 80's hip hop to 90's hip hop. At times feels like listening to two different albums on shuffle. That sounds like a knock, but I thoroughly enjoyed it.

Holy damn wow. 1990?! 1990!!!!???!?! The whole album is good, with incredibly clever, powerful rhymes delivered perfectly, the mixing is great, the samples are minimal but effective--this is the perfect rap album, and I can't believe it happened in 1990. LL Cool J is the father of modern rap, and it's right here in this album. When he does the obligatory "I am the greatest at this and you suck" rap songs, a weird staple of all rap albums, I JUST NOD AND AGREE.

All the bad traits of 90s Rap that killed Hip Hop. The tracks were ok but the lyrics were crap. Also the line "I Sure wouldn't rape you' is worrying

My first real exposure to LL Cool J's music was when I saw his performance of "Mama Said Knock You Out" on MTV Unplugged in 1990 and it blew me away. Listening to this album all the way through serves only to make me more of an admirer. Such great music, lyrics, performing, fun, depth, all of it. Loving the groove, loving the energy in his voice; just really loving this album.

I remember listening to this as a teenager. It was ok then, but didn't pass the test of time. Not only are the lyrics trivial, but also very sexist.

I don’t know what I thought LL Cool J sounded like but it was not this. Pleasantly surprised by the banger beats and his flow. “Around The Way Girl”s’ chorus was so smooth and weaved perfectly into the song at the right times. His lyrics are witty and full of finesse. This is possibly one of the biggest surprises so far with just how much I enjoyed this. “Milky Cereal” is probably my favorite song on the album. It was basically banger after banger. I found myself nodding along to every song and will probably relisten to this album a couple more times. 10/10

Pretty shite. Run of the mill, cliched, insincere tat. Mr. Cool wreaks of desperation, wanting to be in the cool gang but probably spend his high school years playing Warhammer.

Ladies Love Cool James.... As for me? Not so much. His music has just never done it for me. Mama Said Knock You Out is great and there’s a few other good tracks here. But there’s probably a hundred or so rap records I would listen to before this one

Top classic hip hop

Pretty cheesy tbh

Badass old school hip hop. Really dug the album

I am unabashedly nostalgic for this album and the era of hip hop it came from. This came out just when I was just beginning to develop my own musical consciousness apart from what my parents put on. I know every one of these songs despite never having owned a copy of the album myself. I had friends who had the cassette, and we were too young to have much money, so we'd all buy different albums and share. Plus the videos for the singles were all over Yo! MTV Raps and the video jukebox channel. LL Cool J is severely underrated. He, and this album in particular, was a fucking juggernaut when it came out. I feel like around 93/94 any rap that wasn't overtly gangster became viewed as somewhat passe, even in retrospect, which is a shame. Dude was a pioneer and he played a big part in popularizing hip hop with a mass audience. His delivery is iconic, particularly on the ferocious title track.

So fucking good. 5 stars.

I love this album! Remember when he performed Mama Said Knock You Out on VH1 Unplugged? Yeah, he was part of the first rappers to do unplugged shows. Also hard to compute that “comeback” was even a part of this. Around the Way Girl makes me FEEL. Ugh. This album has sexy, fun, hard vibes throughout. Listened to it several times!!

Yeh, something else. 32 years old my arse. Still so fresh.

Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Hell yes.

I never would have sought this album out, but I really enjoyed it. It had great flow throughout and good beats.

Loved this. Eastside rap was a lot more cosmopolitan than west, and I preferred its sound. Mama Said Knock You Out still sounds great, while Milky Cereal is great fun.

Awesome hip hop album

You could call some of this dated and might be right (e.g. some of those keyboard stabs in "Around The Way Girl") but I feel like that's a feature not a bug here. There's never been better music for rap than when organic instruments and/or samples were used (see: "Golden Age of HipHop"); not just drums (although yes 100% drums - kill the 808s forever) but great old funk samples (e.g. James Brown, Rick James) as used liberally here. So the music is catchy as hell and/but LL's rapping is top-notch - not just his great deep voice but his rhythmic flow is perfect. The album is a bit too long (should have capped off around 45 minutes) but the high points make it a great hiphop throwback. 7/10 4 stars.

I think there is only one feat. on this record, which is pretty remarkable. It puts a lot of pressure on LL Cool J. He’s not capable of shouldering a whole record. His talent, his charisma, and his facility are all shallow. More charming than many of his contemporaries, but that just leaves him unchallenging. Struggling to find anything to say, I considered another Kate Bush comparison: Six Minutes of Pleasure vs Moments of Pleasure; Eat Em Up M Chill vs Eat The Music; Mama Said Knock You Out vs Mothers Stands for Comfort. It is a completely unfair fixture. It would be a bloodbath. As a competitor, Cool James would be what my granda would have called a lemon. 1.5 I don’t want to keep giving hip-hop and rap records 1 star, so I am trying more than ever to get on board; to find the positives. LL Cool J’s album made me chuckle a few times; Cheesy Rat Blues, Milky Cereal, the bit in 6 Minutes of Pleasure (which is generously only 4 1/2 minutes long) that goes ‘let's just sit here and relax while my man plays the piano for us’. There is only a goofy caricature of the poisonous, puerile venom of gangsta rap here (‘taking out suckers, while the ladies pucker’) which is practically endearing. I am glad that LL attends to the instructions of his mother, even when those instructions are very irresponsible. At the end of the hour though (can none of these dudes make a 35 minute record?) what can I do? Almost every track is a bar of bassline on a loop. There’s just no musical content. 1/5

Competent rap but not my style. A bit aggro masculine. Did not finish.

A blueprint.

Great Hip Hop

Deep Blue Sea! He’s real! Rapping about milk and cereal my fave

This album strongly reminds me of the late 00s, possibly the early 10s as I used to have this album in rotation for my drives to work. I'd often drop off my housemate at his work while on the way to the office while this album was playing, and his office was best accessed via a lay-by clearly signed as being "No buses". We would always shout "fuck you, no buses!" as we pulled into the layby, because clearly we weren't even in a single bus, let alone multiple buses. Anyway, this album is just fun. It makes you glad that you're listening to it.

Just the epitome of that era of hip hop. The lyricism is clever, the production is simple yet great, and LL Cool J is obviously one of the best to ever do it. What I didn't expect was the range of song themes and tones. I expected the entire album to be somewhat similar to the titular track but there was a broad range of different themes and emotions that really added a lot of depth to the album. Truly one of the greats.

amazing

They don’t make hip hop like they used to…

Classic. This one comes with special memories

Bridging the gap between old school and modern hip hop, this was everywhere the summer of 1990. Boomin' System, Mama Said..., Jinglin' Baby, 'Round the Way Girl. Classic beats and samples, strange in 2026 to hear one MC over an entire album without a ton of guest features. It's all LL all the time.

I wore this tape OUT in the 90s, but today was when I learned that Run The Jewels was named after a lyric from one of the songs on this album. That makes it 27% cooler. This is a 3 star album that is getting an extra star because it makes me feel good.

Much better than expected. When I think of LL Cool J I mainly think of his acting career even though I'm very familiar with the title track and I think it's a banger. I really thought it the track was an outlier but the rest of the tracks are also hard hitting. Maybe the album was a bit too long.

Surprisingly solid. Don't get me wrong, the album's a bit too long, there are some cringe lyrics here and there. But it's an interesting time capsule. It really feels like a transition between 80s rap (see "Eat 'Em Up L Chill" or "Murdergram") and 90s rap (the more RnB and jazz-influenced tracks). Some of the samples on the latter are almost ethereal, definitely the highlights. The title track stands out as well, not really fitting into either of the two categories. It's aggressive and playful in a strangely compelling way. Fav tracks: Around the Way Girl, Mama Said Knock You Out, Jingling Baby (Remixed but Still Jingling), 6 Minutes of Pleasure

Classic old school rap album.

Assured and aggressive but still approachable and amusing.

Förvånansvärt bra old school rap.

Great old school hiphop

Crazy to think that this guy is still around and acting. Hes a long way away from rapping. At least this was clean.

Хип-хап, соул и всё такое. Показалось довольно интересно.

LADIES LOVE COOL JAILO

I love how innocent 90s hip hop could be. LL sounds like he'd be on the The All That soundtrack. Milky Cereal could have been on Doug. It's easy listening. I don't need to know who's beefing with who or if I can play it loudly in certain neighborhoods. Nice addition to the old school hip hop list.

I was patien enough to listen to it till the end but SUCH A TIRING EXPERIENCE IT WAS. Nevertheless, there are some good songs and it gives this very hip hop vibe. 3/5

interessant

Fun for a rap album

L can certainly throw down, even if his lyrics do feel a bit cheesy at times. Overall, I found the experience less challenging than most others in the genre (despite running long). I wouldn't go out of my way to listen to this again, but I'd also be fine letting it roll if it ever DID come back around.

Really solid early 90's hip hop. For some reason I have some notion in my head that LL Cool J has always been some kind of jokey artist but these songs are genuinely really great. He's got a nice laid back flow and the production is tight. The one thing that holds it back for me is that the lyrics aren't exactly profound or deeply artistic, which is one of the best facets of hip hop and rap. I do recognize that it's just one aspect though, and not every artist strives to be some incredible timeless lyricist. "Mama Said Knock You Out" is one of the best 90's rap songs. A true classic that is fun, just a bit tough, and catchy as hell. It's a nice 3/5, maybe a 3.4/5. Not quite high enough to be a 4, but it does deserve a place on this list.

It's alright

A fairly solid LL, which sees him start to come into the golden age from the mid-80s basic beginnings. A lot of people love those early albums, but I often find the production too rudimentary. This is where he starts to shine, in my opinion, for what turns into a pretty good 90s run of albums. Title track is absolute classic. Jingle Baby is great. To the Break of Dawn is a great diss track, aimed at Kool Moe Dee, Ice T and MC Hammer. Lots of smooth picking up girls type rap that has always been a focus of Ladies Love Cool J. Production, which is mostly by Marley Marl, is classic for the era. 3.4/5 probably.

Better than almost all other 80-90's rap but is still way too long. Shave off 20 minutes and this is a SCC.

Yeah, its some cool rap. Album overstays its welcome though. Some good production.

Playful, clear-in-your-ears hip-hop! Slightly RNB! Gangsta but listen to your mama!

Not much to say, except I really enjoyed listening to this. It’s out of my wheelhouse, but it’s interesting musically, intelligent and has a consistent and great groove. Love it.

Bang average

Not a bad record but nothing I would come back to. Cool to listen to once though!

I listened to the first four songs, and they were so campy. They reminded me so much of Hamilton, that I decided to go listen to the entire 2.4 hour Broadway soundtrack before coming back to finish the album. And let me tell ya, this album felt longer.

Kind of surprised that LL Cool J is on this list at all, and I'm a hip-hop fan through and through. I guess if anything, I would've expected one of his earlier albums. But in any case, it's crazy impressive that LL was doing this at 22 years old. He was practically a hip-hop veteran at this point and the titular single "Mama Said Knock You Out" is the most LL Cool J song ever (maybe next to "I'm Bad"). LL just knows how to command attention from the mic and isn't afraid to boast about himself (or try to steal your girl). I will admit that this album is a bit bloated and varies a bit in quality here and there. It felt like I was wading through some gunk to occasionally find some treasure ("Around the Way Girl", "Murdergram", "Mama Said Knock You Out", "To da Break of Dawn"). Not bad overall I guess, but it has its cheesy moments.

A little too long, but some absolute bangers on here.

If this album was just around the bend girl and the title track it might be a 5, but there’s a few stinkers and it goes a bit too long. Will be for sure revisiting some songs, just not the whole album

LL Cool J? More like… cool

A little too long.

Pre-listening thoughts: this is album 100!!!! 😭😭 not sure what I expected but it wasn’t this. Laughing a little cause I mixed LL Cool J up with Ice JJ Fish in middle school and yeah iykyk Post/during listening thoughts: people were so right that this is a great representation of the transition from 80s to 90s rap. I think the best thing this album challenge has done for me is expose me to more rap and hip hop cause I genuinely enjoy those genres but just never really knew where to start in terms of listening to them and finding what eras/specific styles I enjoy. I think this is pretty good but it’s a little too long for my tastes and my head hurts so im sorry LL Cool J that’s not your fault but it’s tainting my perception of this album. 6.5/10 DID I NEED TO HEAR THIS BEFORE I DIE: I dont think so Fav tracks: Around the Way Girl, Murdergram, Cheesy Rat Blues, Mama Said Knock You Out Least fav tracks: I didn’t dislike any tracks but a lot of it sort of blended together just bc of length + headache

I think it was this version of "Jingling Baby" that a friend put on a beloved mixtape he gave me when we were teens, and a nostalgic joy hit me when it came on here, as I hadn't heard it in over a decade; I never knew it was LL Cool J, though I knew his name. Such swerve, the samples career and race. Much of this album is like that, though it is 20 minutes too long.

Pretty enjoyable, with some excellent parts (title track is an all-timer) and some terribly-dated cringe ("Milky Cereal", "Mr Good Bar" - a chocolate bar, for those non-US people - with the choice 'I sure wouldn't rape you' lyric; thanks, LL!). I prefer the previous "disappointing" (?) Walking With A Panther but this has enough classic '90s production to keep its average up. However - pro tip - the excellent "Def Jam 10th Year Anniversary" box set has all the LLCJ you'll ever need.

(reviewed but still jingling)

I found this album just okay. I felt like I was looking at my watch waiting to see if it was over; not always, but sometimes. One thing I'll give LL is he is articulate and his lyrics are easy to understand, whether talking about simple things like girls or more politically charged things. The album was sort of a blend of 80s/90s hip hop and 80s R&B pop (like New Edition and all its members - Bobby Brown, Johnny Gill, Bel Biv Devoe). The title track and Eat Em Up L Chill was more of the former while Around the Way Girl and 6 Minutes of Pleasure was more of the latter. I didn't love the latter. I liked the former but some of the others in that style were boring. Honestly, except for Illegal Search, I didn't find anything worthwhile in the songs after the title track. Cut the album down by 4-5 songs and 20 minutes and maybe it'd be real solid. I will give a shout out to Mr. Good Bar (best song besides the title track) and Murdergram (great beat and pace, maybe better than the title track).

Is it just me or is the most famous track on this record (the title track) the weakest of the bunch? Also, I appreciated the Bartles and Jaymes reference in “To da Break of Dawn”, but that’s because I’m old and the first sip of alcohol I ever had was a Bartles and Jaymes wine cooler I stole from my parents at a Fourth of July Barbecue in the early 90’s. The music is pretty good, the lyrics mostly are dated and of their time at best, 3 stars.

Ain't no Erik B and Rakim but infectious rhymes and beats make this a winner. A good antidote to all the gangsta shit but some of the Boyz to men moments are a bit unforgivable. Mama said knock you out is one of the great walk on tracks, for any sport. Pumped.

There's a lot to like on this album. The beats are good, sample choices are a plus and you already know some of the songs. I guess that leaves LL himself. There's something a little too "teen heartthrob" about him that kept me from loving this. It's okay, and great at moments. Worth a listen.

Ahhh the soundtrack of my middle/high school dances. I'm kind of surprised they let us listen to this. 😳

Bailed out of the first listen. Came back the following day to give it another crack, and it's actually pretty smooth. I didn't like the album too much, but it isn't bad and came away with some songs saved to the playlist. Guess stuff like this is what the generator is about.

I enjoyed the beats. Don't know what he was saying to much. Something about ice cream, riding the bus and raping a woman. xXxplicit

Pretty sure I've heard of the guy but never heard his music before. The beats are fine but the rhymes are awful. Worst thing is 3 songs into the album he raps "Your rhymes are cheesy, you found them in a mouse trap" as a diss. Look in the mirror 2/5

1990 checklist... Fear of a Black Planet- absolutely! AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted- of course! Mamma Said Knock You Out-um, NO! LL's identity crisis album as he emulates Will Smith going hard.

This album is so 90s hip hop it almost hurts. The beat, the cadence, the lyrics, everything cements this so firmly I can see the shifting camera angles closing and pulling out during the chorus. Enjoyable, sure, but goodness. Though, special shoutout to Milky Cereal for being so cleverly corny that it may as well have been sold by General Mills.

Personally I just think this album was too long and also similar to a lot of stuff I have heard before HOWEVER I do recognize there is immense influence and therefore give it praise.

Rap's not my thing.

Please do knock me out - save having to listen to this shit 1/5 19/11/25

No. Beats are fine, everything else is just... no...

Another one of those classic hip-hop albums. "Around the Way Girl" and the titular "Mama Said Knock You Out" tracks are well-known hits. Every song just felt good to listen to.

Almost a perfect album from LL, but it does run a bit too long. If he could have trimmed this down to like 45 to 50 minutes, it would have been a 5 out of 5, but it gets a 4.5 from me

Great hip hop with legitimate lyrics

I need to add this to the rotation. This is my rap sweet spot

LL was a gateway for a lot of white kids. This album changed the game (and the sound) when it came out. Sure, the lyrics aren’t appropriate for today, then again we have someone in the White House that has said and done much worse.

The beats hit hard, the confidence is sky-high, and LL sounds locked in, sharp, and hungry. It’s slick without losing grit, polished but never soft. Absolutely iconic.

Ya si eso, mejor empiezo mañana.

Lurved

I want to hate on this album for being so damn cheesy but then halfway through there is a song about everyone thinks he’s too cheesy. I’ll be damned if LL’s stupid charm didn’t win me over!

One of my first hip hop albums

W rap album

LL Cool J and the LL stands for Living Legend ya heard!?!? Break beats and 90s hip hop goes together like peanut butter and jelly. The way LL flowed on these beats were absolutely ridiculous, brother was in the studio and just left earth. 5 stars for Hip Hop and 5 stars for the legend LL Cool J!

прикольный, несколько раз глаза выкатились от текста, некоторые песни реально понравились, качовые. буду переслушивать их

classic, listened many times