Smoke Some Kill is the third album by rapper Schoolly D. The album was released in 1988 on Jive Records and was produced by Schoolly D.
Though the album was not as successful as Saturday Night! â The Album, it made it to No. 180 on the Billboard 200 and No. 50 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop album chart.
The song "Signifying Rapper" was based upon the "signifying monkey" character of African-American folklore. A version of this story was performed by Rudy Ray Moore. Schoolly D's adaptation of the story is recited over the rhythm guitar figure from Led Zeppelin's "Kashmir". The song was featured in the film Bad Lieutenant, and inspired the title of (and is discussed in) the book .
"Signifying Rapper" was the target of several lawsuits following its use in the 1992 film Bad Lieutenant, in multiple scenes.
In 1994, Live Home Video and distributor Aries Film Releasing were ordered to destroy any unsold copies of Bad Lieutenant as part of a copyright infringement ruling. Director Abel Ferrara was angered by the incident, which he felt "ruined the movie":
The album received generally mixed reviews from most music critics. The Los Angeles Daily News gave the album a B. Rolling Stone reviewer Cary Darling panned the album, writing "With its images of gun-toting bluster, mushrooming genitals and rampant drug use â backed by thuddingly dull beats â Smoke Some Kill should be played for every prospective rapper so he'll know what not to do." AllMusic reviewer Ron Wynn called the album "more chaotic than creative". In his consumer guide for The Village Voice, critic Robert Christgau called Schoolly D "the white audience's paranoid-to-masochistic fantasy of a B-boy" and commended him for "realizing the fantasy so scarily, and for commanding his own tough-guy sound".