The production was handled by Ant, who assumed the name Solomon Grundy for the project.
[1] In a 2008 interview with Impose, Slug said: "When we made the Dynospectrum, I was so high, I really thought we were like a legion of superheroes.
[3] Peter S. Scholtes of City Pages placed the album at number 10 on the "Top Local Records of 1998" list, describing it as "a dense, tense, ultimately rewarding journey into hip hop's dark heart.
"[5] Writing for City Pages in 2013, Chaz Kangas called it "one of the greatest hidden treasures of the Rhymesayers catalog".
[6] In that year, Potholes in My Blog placed it at number 7 on the "12 Best Rhymesayers Albums" list.