Look at the picture above and see if you can spot any similarities. Ha. Okay, I was just messin' with yas. Those two objects have nothing in common; it was a trick question. Oh. Well, except, looking at it now, I suppose you could say they're both CDs... by the same artist... with the same photo on it. Okay, actually, I guess they're very similar, except one is from 1996 and one is current, from 2018. So what's the deal? Well, Dope Folks - as you should know from reading this very blog, - has been putting out rare and unreleased Stezo tracks for kind of a while now. And now they've put out this CD version, limited to 250 copies (there's a purple cassette limited to just 50 copies, too), that compiles a bunch of that stuff and adds some more. And that includes pretty much everything from his rare EP, Where's the Funk At. Hence the referencing covers.
So let's break it all down and see what's what. If you have all the previous Dope Folks vinyl EPs, do you need this album? And yes, at eighteen tracks deep, I'd call Bop Ya Headz a full-length album. And an alternative question, if you have all of Stezo's vintage, indie material, do you need this album? Because this release definitely dips into both wells.
So what's on here? Okay, first up are all the seven songs from Dope Folks' Unreleased and Rarities EP, which I covered here and includes the three previously unheard kick-ass demo tracks, and all four tracks from Where's the Funk At. So, to be clear, those four tracks appear on both the Unreleased and Rarities EP and the original Where's the Funk At CD, as well as now Bop Ya Headz. Stay with me, it gets a little complicated. Because then it also features the four instrumentals from Where's the Funk At, which were on the original 1996 CD, but not the Dope Folks EP. So if you've just got the Dope Folks EPs, you don't have those. But, one thing Bop doesn't have is the "Where's the Funk At" remix, which I believe was newly recorded in 2015 specifically for Dope Folks' Unreleased EP. So getting Bop doesn't completely invalidate Unreleased.
And just to clarify further, and hopefully not confuse the issue, I should point out that there was also a different "Where's the Funk At" 12" released back in the day on Funktown Flav Records. That, and its B-side "Figure It Out" are both the same songs featured on the aforementioned Where's the Funk At EP and, by extension, the Unreleased and Rarities EP. All the same versions of the same couple songs.
But that's not where Bop Ya Headz ends; it's just the first half. It also features all five songs, from Dope Folks' 2017 More Rarities EP. All five of those songs had been previously released on two indie Stezo 12"s, "Bop Ya Headz" on Funktown Records in 1994 and "Mr. S" on Funktown Flav Records in 1997. And Bop also throws in the two instrumentals from the 1994 12" (though not the ones from the 1997 12"). Those are the same two instrumentals they put on More Rarities, so nothing different there. Except More Rarities had another, different remix of "Where's the Funk At," which is exclusive to that EP. And I'll just mention that those two 12"s were top shelf Stezo material, even better than the Where's the Funk At EP, so if you dug the other stuff, you'll definitely like these tracks.
So that's it. Let's tally up. If you just get the Dope Folks' EPs, the only thing you'd be missing out on is the "Mr. S" instrumentals and the "Where's the Funk At" acappella, which was on the Where's the Funk At EP... which explains how Dope Folks was able to make those remixes. Bop Ya Headz nets you everything except those new mixes and the "Mr S" instrumentals. If you just have the original records, you'd not only be missing those new remixes (which I have to say are pretty good, though, especially the Handz Remix from More Rarities) but the three 1990 demo tracks. So you'll want to get at least one of these newer releases for sure; but you may not feel the need to spring for everything here. This is more of an easier way for Stezo fans to get all that stuff Dope Folks was putting out for the last couple years in one convenient album, and obviously more for CD/ tape collectors who would've given the vinyl a miss. If you're all caught up on wax, there's no new music to be discovered on this one.
Getting all this compiled feels a bit like they're wrapping up, a final summation. But could there still be more vintage Stezo in Dope Folks' future? We know there's still more unreleased demo tracks out there that could make for a pretty sweet release or two. We'll just have to wait and see...