Built from Scratch
Built from Scratch: How a Couple of Regular Guys Grew The Home Depot from Nothing to $30 Billion is a business memoir published in 1999 by Bernie Marcus (d. 2024) and Arthur Blank, the co-founders of The Home Depot, in collaboration with writer Bob Andelman.[1] The book recounts their entrepreneurial journey after being fired from their previous jobs, detailing how they established The Home Depot in 1978 as a warehouse-style home improvement retailer offering low prices, wide product selection, and knowledgeable customer service.[2] It covers the company's rapid expansion over its first 20 years, growing from a single store in Atlanta, Georgia, to 761 locations across the United States and Canada, ultimately reaching $30 billion in annual sales by 1999.[3] The narrative alternates between chapters written in the voices of Marcus and Blank, providing personal anecdotes, challenges faced—such as early financial struggles and competition from established retailers—and key business strategies that drove success, including a focus on employee empowerment and community involvement.[1] Released to coincide with The Home Depot's 20th anniversary, the book emphasizes lessons in innovation, customer-centricity, and scaling a startup into a Fortune 500 giant, while highlighting the founders' commitment to corporate responsibility, such as charitable contributions through The Home Depot Foundation.[2] It has been praised for its candid insights into retail disruption and remains a recommended read for aspiring entrepreneurs, with a paperback edition issued in 2001 by Crown Currency, a division of Penguin Random House.[3]Background
Group context
The X-Ecutioners formed in the late 1980s in New York City as a DJ collective initially known as the X-Men, emerging from the vibrant hip-hop scene to focus on turntablism and advanced scratching techniques.[4] Founded by a group of young DJs including Roc Raida, who acquired his first turntables as a child and connected with peers to create the crew, the collective emphasized innovative manipulation of records to produce rhythmic patterns and sound effects central to hip-hop instrumentation.[4] They changed their name to The X-Ecutioners in the early 1990s to avoid conflicts with the comic book franchise, solidifying their identity as a pioneering ensemble dedicated to elevating DJing beyond solo acts.[5] The group's core lineup during its formative years and leading into the late 1990s included Total Eclipse, Roc Raida, Rob Swift, and Mista Sinista, with DJ Precision later joining to contribute to their evolving sound.[6] Each member brought specialized skills: Rob Swift pioneered beat juggling, a technique he developed to manipulate drum breaks across two turntables for seamless, percussive compositions that became a hallmark of group performances.[6] Roc Raida excelled in battle-style scratching and rhythmic precision, often leading the crew in synchronized routines that showcased turntablism as a collaborative art form.[4] Total Eclipse provided foundational mixing and production expertise, drawing from his championship background in international turntable competitions.[7] Together, they innovated team-based DJing, performing intricate, multi-turntable sets that blended scratching, cutting, and looping to mimic full band dynamics in live hip-hop contexts.[5] The X-Ecutioners released their debut album, X-Pressions, in 1997 on the independent label Asphodel Records, featuring entirely instrumental tracks built around turntable manipulations and hip-hop breaks.[8] The album received modest critical attention within niche circles, praised for advancing turntablism as a compositional genre but achieving limited commercial reach, which reinforced their status as an underground staple in the hip-hop community.[8][9] By the late 1990s, the group's success in high-profile turntable battles—such as Rob Swift's 1992 East Coast DMC Championship win and their collective dominance in events like the International Turntable Federation competitions—drew attention from major labels, marking a shift from underground obscurity to broader industry interest.[6][10] Their innovative collaborations with hip-hop artists during this period, including appearances on tracks and tours, further highlighted their technical prowess and paved the way for mainstream opportunities.[10] Roc Raida, a key architect of their sound, passed away in 2009 from complications following a martial arts training accident.Album conception
The X-Ecutioners initiated the development of Built from Scratch in the late 1990s, capitalizing on their burgeoning reputation gained through underground mixtapes and renowned DJ battles that established them as leading turntablists in New York's hip-hop scene.[11][12] This period marked a pivotal shift for the group, originally formed as the X-Men in 1989, as they sought to transition from battle performances and independent releases to a major-label project that could expand their reach.[13] Following the success of their 1997 debut album X-Pressions on the indie Asphodel label, they signed a deal with Loud Records, a prominent hip-hop imprint, to achieve wider distribution and production resources for their sophomore effort.[14] The album's conception centered on a creative vision to showcase advanced turntablism within a cohesive full-length format, moving beyond niche DJ enthusiast audiences by integrating intricate scratching techniques with vocal features from prominent hip-hop artists.[13] This approach aimed to highlight the group's technical prowess—rooted in routines like the "X-Ecutioners Scratch"—while creating accessible tracks that blended raw turntable manipulations with beats, rhymes, and collaborations, such as those with Large Professor and M.O.P.[13] Thematically, Built from Scratch embodied a metaphor for constructing hip-hop from its foundational elements, emphasizing scratches, beats, and historical influences to represent the genre's depth and stylistic evolution.[15] Drawing inspiration from classic hip-hop albums, including Public Enemy's Yo! Bum Rush the Show (1987), the project adopted a raw, aggressive aesthetic that paid homage to early pioneers like Grandmaster Flash while pushing turntablism into mainstream consciousness.[13] This vision reflected the group's commitment to revitalizing hip-hop's core elements amid the commercial dominance of the era, positioning the album as a testament to turntablism's enduring role in the culture.[13]Recording and production
Sessions and timeline
The recording of Built from Scratch spanned from 1999 to 2001, taking place across various studios including The Cutting Room, Axis Studios, Sound On Sound, Adiar Cor Studios, Linkin Park Studio, The Record Plant, and others in New York, California, Connecticut, and the United Kingdom.[16] This extended period allowed the X-Ecutioners to refine their turntablism while integrating guest contributions, with key tracks like "It's Goin' Down" featuring Linkin Park recorded at Linkin Park Studio and The Record Plant during this timeframe.[16] Final mixing aligned with the album's February 2002 release. Technical aspects emphasized analog and early digital methods typical of turntablism production, utilizing vinyl records played on professional turntables like the Technics SL-1200 series for scratches and routines, alongside digital sampling tools to layer sounds and build tracks.[17] These elements were recorded at various facilities to accommodate the group's base and collaborator availability, ensuring a cohesive yet dynamic final product.Collaborators and production team
The production of Built from Scratch involved a diverse array of collaborators, including renowned hip-hop producers who brought their distinctive beats to specific tracks. DJ Premier contributed his signature gritty, sample-heavy style to "Premier's X-Ecution," crafting a track that layered intricate scratches over a hard-hitting drum pattern inspired by classic funk breaks.[16][18] Mike Shinoda handled production on "It's Goin' Down," infusing the cut with rock-inflected rhythms and electronic elements that complemented the group's turntablism. Dan the Automator provided a funky, orchestral backdrop for "X-ecutioners (Theme) Song," emphasizing playful instrumentation to highlight the DJs' routines. Internal X-Ecutioners members, such as Roc Raida, also took on production duties and scratches across multiple tracks, including "B-boy Punk Rock 2001," where his precise cuts added rhythmic depth to the ensemble's performances.[16][19] Featured artists played a pivotal role in blending vocal elements with the album's scratch-centric sound, elevating turntablism's visibility through high-profile crossovers. Large Professor appeared on and co-produced "XL," delivering sharp rhymes that intertwined with Rob Swift's scratches to showcase battle-ready lyricism. Mike Shinoda and Mr. Hahn of Linkin Park joined for "It's Goin' Down," where Hahn's scratches bridged hip-hop and nu-metal, helping propel scratching techniques into broader mainstream audiences via the track's energetic fusion. Turntablists like DJ Apollo featured on the "Intro," contributing cuts alongside Shortkut and Vin Roc to set a collaborative tone for the project's DJ collective ethos.[16][19][20] Peter Kang served as executive producer, overseeing the integration of the X-Ecutioners' indie roots with Loud Records' major-label resources during the album's assembly in various studios from 1999 to 2001.[21] For the final polish, particularly on the scratch-heavy tracks, mastering engineer Leon Zervos handled the album's overall sonic balance at Sterling Sound, ensuring clarity in the dense layers of vinyl manipulations and beats.[16][21]Release and promotion
Commercial release
Built from Scratch was published on April 27, 1999, by Crown Business, an imprint of Random House.[22] The hardcover edition had 352 pages and was priced at around $25 USD.[22] A paperback edition followed on July 3, 2001, published by Crown Currency, also with 352 pages and priced at $20 USD.[3] The book was distributed through major retailers and became available in digital formats later, including e-book editions as of 2019.[1] The release was timed to coincide with The Home Depot's 20th anniversary in 1999.[1]Singles and marketing
The book received promotion through media appearances and interviews with the authors, Bernie Marcus and Arthur Blank, highlighting their entrepreneurial story.[1] Marketing efforts emphasized its lessons for business leaders, with coverage in outlets like business publications and ties to The Home Depot's corporate narrative. No specific book tour details are widely documented, but the narrative's focus on innovation and growth appealed to aspiring entrepreneurs, contributing to its enduring recommendation in business literature.[2]Music and themes
Genre and style
Built from Scratch is primarily a hip-hop album with a heavy emphasis on turntablism, incorporating techniques such as scratching, beat juggling, and instrumental breaks to showcase DJ skills over traditional MC vocals.[23] The album blends these elements into a framework that prioritizes the turntable as the central instrument, drawing from old-school hip-hop traditions while exploring breakbeat fusion across hip-hop, rock, and other genres.[24] The X-Ecutioners' style on the album is rooted in 1970s DJ culture, particularly the innovations of pioneers like Grandmaster Flash, whose scratching and cutting techniques inspired early turntablists including group member Roc Raida.[4] It also reflects 1990s underground hip-hop developments, such as beat juggling popularized at events like the New Music Seminar, and incorporates emerging nu-metal crossovers through the collaboration with Linkin Park on the track "It's Goin' Down."[4][25] Signature elements include complex scratch patterns treated as lead "instruments," supported by minimalistic beats that highlight the DJs' precision and kinetic energy, alongside skits that reinforce the group's dynamic interplay.[24] These features make turntablism accessible to broader audiences without diluting its technical core.[24] The album spans 68 minutes across 21 tracks, structured as a mix of full songs and interludes to emulate a live DJ set.[23][16]Track composition
"Built from Scratch" showcases the X-Ecutioners' turntablism through intricate track structures that emphasize layered scratching routines and rhythmic interplay. The album opens with foundational pieces that highlight pure DJ skills before transitioning into collaborative efforts, creating a progression from solitary instrumental showcases to dynamic, feature-heavy compositions. Early tracks like "X-Ecutioners Scratch" serve as a pure turntable showcase, built around repetitive, escalating scratch patterns that layer basic phrases into complex polyrhythms, drawing heavily on classic hip-hop samples for rhythmic foundation.[26][18] A standout example is "A Journey Into Sound," which integrates Kenny Muhammad's vocal beatboxing as a central rhythmic element alongside the group's scratches, forming a hybrid percussion track that mimics orchestral depth through human and vinyl sounds. This piece samples Kraftwerk's "The Robots" for electronic pulses and the Fat Boys' "Human Beat Box" to underscore the beatbox tradition, while the four DJs layer transformer-style scratches and flares to build tension and release. Instrumentation across tracks relies on sampled drum breaks and basslines from 1990s hip-hop staples, such as Mobb Deep's "Shook Ones (Pt. II)" in "Let It Bang," which contrasts aggressive guest verses from M.O.P. with sharp turntable stabs for rhythmic contrast.[27][28][26] The album's thematic flow begins with introspective, skill-demonstrating scratches in tracks like "X-Ecutioners Scratch" and "A Journey Into Sound," evolving into high-energy fusions as seen in "Premier's X-Ecution," where DJ Premier's production frames the X-Ecutioners' vinyl slicing over a gritty beat to evoke battle-ready intensity. Later compositions, such as "The X (Y'all Know the Name)," incorporate multiple guest rappers over thumping bass and crowd-simulating effects from integrated noise samples, simulating live performance energy and culminating in crossover anthems like "It's Goin' Down." Innovations include the seamless blending of beat juggling with guest vocals to create live-like spontaneity, as in the use of transformer scratches for dynamic volume modulation and the incorporation of vocal beats to expand turntablism's percussive palette.[18][26]Critical reception
Professional reviews
AllMusic's Steve Huey praised the X-Ecutioners' lightning-fast deck skills that evoke nostalgia for old-school hip-hop and their masterful exploration of breakbeat fusion, describing them as the "freshest crew on the block," while noting that the album rarely deviates from a strictly old-school template, which might draw objections from purists over its overt commercialism.[23] Resident Advisor offered a favorable take, emphasizing the album's exploration of turntablism and its appeal to club audiences seeking fresh hip-hop production edges through club-friendly tracks like "Let It Bang" and "Play That Beat."[13]Aggregate scores and consensus
On Metacritic, Built from Scratch received a score of 62 out of 100 based on 11 critic reviews, signifying mixed or average reception.[24] Critics commonly praised the album's innovation in turntablism, highlighting tracks like "X-Ecutioners Scratch" and "A Journey into Sound" for their musical wizardry and fresh breakbeat fusion across genres.[18] Strong guest spots from artists such as Large Professor, Kool G. Rap, Pharoahe Monch, and Linkin Park were also lauded for adding vocal style and pizzazz, with the overall consensus viewing the release as a key step in making DJ albums viable for mainstream audiences beyond niche turntablist fans.[18][29] Conversely, some critics and users criticized the album's over-reliance on skits, which were deemed pointless or dull and disruptive to the flow.[30] Non-feature tracks were faulted for lacking vocal depth, with heavy dependence on collaborations often obscuring the group's core scratching routines.[29] The album earned no major Grammy nominations but received underground acclaim in hip-hop circles, bolstered by the X-Ecutioners' ties to turntablist awards like the DMC World DJ Championships, where members such as Roc Raida (1995 world champion) and DJ Precision (two-time U.S. champion) had previously excelled.[31][32]Commercial performance
Chart performance
Built from Scratch debuted at number 15 on the US Billboard 200 chart in March 2002. The album also peaked at number 13 on the US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart. Internationally, it reached number 121 on the French Albums Chart and number 19 on the UK Albums Chart. The lead single "It's Goin' Down" peaked at number 85 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 4 on the Hot Rap Songs chart. In year-end rankings for 2002, the album placed at number 150 on the Canadian R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart and number 76 on the Canadian Rap Albums chart, according to Nielsen SoundScan data.| Chart (2002) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| US Billboard 200 | 15 |
| US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums | 13 |
| French Albums (SNEP) | 121 |
| UK Albums (OCC) | 19 |
Sales and certifications
The album Built from Scratch debuted at number 15 on the US Billboard 200 chart. This initial performance was significantly boosted by the crossover success of the lead single "It's Goin' Down," featuring Mike Shinoda and Mr. Hahn of Linkin Park, which reached number 13 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart and number 85 on the Hot 100, as well as number 7 on the UK Singles Chart. The track's popularity at rock radio and its number 7 peak on the UK Singles Chart further contributed to the album's visibility in international markets. Despite these gains, the album's niche focus on turntablism and hip-hop limited its broader commercial appeal, even as Linkin Park's rising fame in 2002 provided a promotional tailwind. Built from Scratch has not received any certifications from the RIAA in the United States. No official certifications were awarded by Music Canada or other major industry bodies, reflecting its modest sales trajectory outside initial momentum from the single.Track listing and credits
Track listing
The album Built from Scratch by The X-Ecutioners consists of 21 tracks with a total runtime of 68:02.[16]| No. | Title | Duration | Featuring | Producer(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Intro | 1:11 | DJ Apollo, DJ Shortkut, DJ Vinroc | Apollo |
| 2 | XL | 2:39 | Large Professor | Large Professor |
| 3 | X-Ecutioners Scratch | 3:37 | — | — |
| 4 | A Journey Into Sound | 4:31 | Kenny Muhammad | The X-Ecutioners |
| 5 | Hip Hop Awards (Skit) | 2:49 | — | — |
| 6 | 3 Boroughs | 1:24 | — | — |
| 7 | Let It Bang | 3:30 | M.O.P. | Knobody |
| 8 | X-Ecutioners (Theme) Song | 3:18 | Dan the Automator | Dan the Automator |
| 9 | Feel the Bass | 3:56 | — | — |
| 10 | You Can't Scratch (Skit) | 1:21 | — | — |
| 11 | It's Goin' Down | 4:08 | Mike Shinoda, Mr. Hahn | Mike Shinoda |
| 12 | Premier's X-Ecution | 4:41 | — | DJ Premier |
| 13 | The X (Y'all Know the Name) | 3:39 | — | — |
| 14 | Genius of Love 2002 | 3:56 | Biz Markie, Tom Tom Club | — |
| 15 | Choppin' Niggas Up | 2:25 | — | — |
| 16 | B-Boy Punk Rock 2001 | 2:28 | Everlast | — |
| 17 | Who Wants to Be a M**Fin' Millionaire (Skit) | 2:47 | — | — |
| 18 | Play That Beat | 4:46 | Fatman Scoop | CJ Moore |
| 19 | Dramacyde | 3:36 | Big Pun, Kool G Rap | Sean Cane |
| 20 | X-Ecution of a Bum Rush | 2:28 | Beat Junkies | Beat Junkies |
| 21 | Play That Beat (Lo-Fidelity Allstars Remix) | 4:21 | — | Lo-Fidelity Allstars |