Timbaland and Magoo - Welcome To Our World (1997) Vinyl LP • Up Jumps da Boogie
Catalog Number:
92772-1Musical Styles:
1990s, Bounce, Electro-Funk, G-Funk, Hip-Hop, Jazzy Hip Hop, New Jack Swing, Pop RapSleeve Grade:
Very Good (VG)Record Grade:
Excellent (EX)Condition Details:
Vinyl plays with occasional crackles (play-graded). Double LP. Cover has a few creases near edges; light-scuffing, surface impressions, warping (front/back). Inner-sleeve are generic white. Spine is partly readable with noticeable wear. Minor shelf-wear along bottom-edge, heavier across top-edge and corners. Opening is crisp with signs of light use and divots. (Not a cut-out.)
Tracks:
- Beep Beep
- Feel It
- Up Jumps Da' Boogie
- Clock Strikes
- 15 After Da' Hour
- Ms. Parker (Interlude)
- Luv 2 Luv U (Remix)
- Luv 2 Luv U
- Smoke In Da' Air
- Intro Buddha (Interlude)
- Peepin' My Style
- Writtin' Rhymes
- Deep In Your Memory
- Clock Strikes (Remix)
- Sex Beat (Interlude)
- Man Undercover
- Joy
- Up Jumps Da' Boogie (Remix)
About The Record:
Welcome To Our World, by Timbaland and Magoo, marked the debut full-length album from the Virginia duo and served as an early showcase for Timbaland’s revolutionary production style that blended stuttering beats, unusual sound effects, and heavy R&B/hip-hop fusion. The record introduced the world to Timbaland’s signature futuristic sound on a grand scale, featuring heavy guest appearances from future stars like Missy Elliott, Aaliyah, Ginuwine, and Playa—all part of the Swing Mob/Da Basement crew that would soon dominate late-90s urban music. Standout fan-favorite tracks include the playful, bouncy Up Jumps da Boogie (featuring Missy Elliott and Aaliyah), the seductive Luv 2 Luv U, and the quirky Clock Strikes with its memorable bell-sample hook. The lead single Up Jumps da Boogie became a major hit, peaking at No. 12 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 1 on the Hot Rap Singles chart, while the album itself reached No. 33 on the Billboard 200. Widely regarded as an underrated classic, it laid crucial groundwork for the experimental sound that Timbaland would perfect on later blockbuster projects.