tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-62603768249235302992024-03-12T20:18:50.338-05:00Review Hip-HopGet my opinions on whatever I happen to be listening to.BanjoStoryhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04210388285879063672noreply@blogger.comBlogger38125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-36193448777680177262014-06-19T03:13:00.002-05:002014-06-19T03:13:37.624-05:00Top 90 Albums of the 90's: 50-41<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<b>#50 <i>In My Lifetime: Vol 1</i> - Jay-Z (1997)</b><br />
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After having his debut considered an instant classic, his sophomore album was Jay-Z's first venture into making true "mainstream" hip-hop. Biggie died between the new releases, and Jay was eager to take up the throne as the new King of New York, even going so far as to enlist Puffy. The production is flashier and covered in a distinct layer of polish compared to <i>Reasonable Doubt</i>. The album suffers from a bit of an identity crisis, though. Jay made his name with gritty, hood-friendly content and that bleeds over somewhat into <i>Vol. 1</i>. The glossy radio beats don't compliment them as well.<br />
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<b>#49 <i>No Need for Alarm</i> - Del the Funky Homosapien (1993)</b><br />
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Del got his opportunity to venture out on his own, without Ice Cube's shadow looming over him, for the first time with <i>No Need for Alarm</i>. Not having that established presence looking over his shoulder was a double edged sword for Del. He was able to abandon the G-funk conventions that held back <i>Brother George</i> and create his own style, clearly influenced by some of his New York underground contemporaries. On the other hand, <i>No Need for Alarm</i> sometimes feels aimless. There's little rhyme or reason as to why these tracks are being put on an album together, most of them are just braggadocio tracks with no real substance behind them. Del excels in this facet, though. I don't know if there's anybody in the world who could come up with a more effective hour's worth of rhyming compliments for themself.<br />
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<b>#48 <i>Enta Da Stage</i> - Black Moon (1993)</b><br />
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<i>Enta Da Stage</i> tends to get overshadowed by fellow 1993 release <i>Enter the Wu-Tang,</i> as far as it's impact in reviving the East Coast hip-hop scene after America became enamored with G-funk in the late 80's and early 90's. While it definitely didn't see the same level of sales as <i>Enter the Wu-Tang</i> did, I would argue that it's better withstood the test of time. <br />
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Buckshot is an MC that I can't believe didn't get more famous in the 90's He was only 18 when Enta Da Stage was being recorded, and while his subject matter was limited, it was a more cynical and personal look at hood life than what most other MCs were putting out. The dark, grimy production accents the cynical, angry lyrics perfectly.<br />
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<b>#47 <i>Funcrusher Plus</i> - Company Flow (1997)</b><br />
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This album has the distinction of being the launching pad for two separate record labels. It was the first release by Rawkus Records, which would shortly after make a name for itself as the the home of Talib Kweli, Pharoahe Monch, and Mos Def. A couple years down the road, Company Flow's front man El-P would launch Definitive Jux, and proceed to dominate the early 2000's underground scene.<br />
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Funcrusher Plus is a definitely rough around the edges, but it shakes so many conventions that I'd definitely believe that it's intentional. The beats are jagged and arrhythmic, and the lyrics are dense and erratically delivered. It's just weird enough to work, though, and if you're a fan of the Def Jux style, it's a must listen.<br />
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<b>#46 <i>Bizarre Ryde 2 The Pharcyde</i> - The Pharcyde (1992)</b><br />
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The Pharcyde ere clearly cut from the same cloth as their fellow West Coast underground notables from the early 90's. Sonically, it'd be hard to differentiate it from an early Hieroglyphics release. The production style is similar, and they feature a similar style of seamlessly trading braggadocios verses between the multiple MCs. Bizarre Ryde gets a bit bogged down in immature humor at times, but overall it's an album that is a fun listen, with a few moments are legitimately worth a laugh the first few times you hear them.<br />
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Also, it scores bonus points because the carver art features the least discrete depiction of a vagina to ever make it by censors.<br />
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<b>#45 <i>The Diary</i> - Scarface (1994)</b><br />
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Scarface was clearly the most talented member of Geto Boys. When the group fell apart after <i>We Can't Be Stopped</i>, he showed quickly after that he was competent as a solo MC with 1991's <i>Mr. Scarface Is Back</i>. He came out with a unique blending of East Coast and West Coast styles that made him one of the most influential gangsta rappers of all time. He perfected that style with 1994's "<i>The Diary</i>". What makes this such a strong release aren't standout tracks or really anything exceptional from a technical point of view, but the consistency of it. I, honestly, couldn't name a single track on this album because I listen to it end to end without skipping a track every time.<br />
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<b>#44 <i>The Main Ingredient</i> - Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth (1994)</b><br />
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The theme of <i>The Main Ingredient</i> is that Pete and C.L. were scaling back their sound; distilling it down to it's most basic key component, a main ingredient, if you will. Pete Rock's slow, smooth beats are the primary appeal here. They're full-bodied and satisfying without ever being imposing. C.L. Smooth holds his own, too. It's kind of unfortunate that he doesn't get more credit, to be honest. He's got a narrative style of rhyming that was on par with anybody else out at the time. <br />
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<b>#43 <i>Step In The Arena</i> -Gang Starr (1991)</b><br />
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It sounds a bit dated now, but relative to what else was coming out at the time, Step in the Arena was a pinnacle of both subject matter and production. Guru's got a much more mature perspective of what was going on in the ghetto than anybody else at the time had. Premo is his typical, outstanding, self. He flexes his scratching muscles here, creating a style which would eventually become his signature sound.<br />
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<b>#42 <i>The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill</i> - Lauryn Hill (1998)</b><br />
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Another hip-hop hybrid album from another former Fugee, Lauryn Hill made her solo debut in 1998 to rave reviews, and absurd sales. She promptly exiled herself from the music community, and has yet to produce another record. It still stands as the highest selling hip-hop album by a female artist by a tremendous margin. <br />
The production is heavily R&B and Reggae influenced. The lyrics focus heavily on the concept of love, not surprising given that the album came in the wake of the birth of her first child, and her breakup with Wyclef Jean and the Fugees, in general. The first handful of tracks really outshine the rest of the album, unfortunately.<br />
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<b>#41 <i>93 'til Infinity </i>- Souls of Mischief (1993)</b><br />
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<i>'93 til Infinity</i> stands out to me as the strongest release of the early California underground scene. Listening to the four of them effortlessly trade verses back and forth is a real treat, very reminiscent of A Tribe Called Quest's great albums. The beats don't really stand out, but the rolling basslines and jazzy samples serve as a great backdrop to Souls' freestyle rhymes.Banjohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14522575346857965146noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-69227750648678652972014-06-17T02:35:00.003-05:002014-06-17T02:35:53.596-05:00Top 90 Albums of the 90's: 60-51<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<b>#60 <i>The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory</i> - 2Pac (1996)</b><br />
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Released just a couple months after his death, <i>Killuminati</i> is considered 2Pac's last studio album. The story behind the title is that 2Pac occasionally went by the alias "Makaveli", after Italian political theorist Niccolo Machiavelli. Machiavelli supposedly at some point in his life faked his own death for seven days in some sort of convoluted revenge plot. The implication of Pac's label giving the album such a title, and having the cover image be an illustration of 2Pac on a cross (another resurrection reference) was that 2Pac wasn't actually dead, and would be returning at some point. To this day, there are those out there who believe that 2Pac will come back some day and save hip-hop, or something.<br />
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So the cover art and title are really stupid and unabashedly exploitative, what about the music? It's some of Pac's best. He goes back to his roots somewhate here, defaulting back to the type of content that made him famous. G-Funk style beats and aggressive delivery of strongly worded lyrics.<br />
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<b>#59 <i>Doe or Die</i> - AZ (1995)</b><br />
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AZ had been the only guest <i>Illmatic</i>, an album that has gone on to be considered by most to be the best hip-hop album ever recorded. His outstanding verse on "Life's a Bitch" put the spotlight squarely on him to release an album of his own. Expectations were too high, unfortunately, and <i>Doe or Die</i> was considered somewhat of a disappointment by those expecting a second <i>Illmatic</i>. It's an outstanding album in it's own right, though. AZ isn't quite the MC that Nas is, but he's got the chops to hold his own against anybody in the world. AZ wasn't the main problem with Doe or Die, lackluster production keeps it from making the leap to all-time classic.<br />
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<b>#58 <i>We Can't Be Stopped</i> - Geto Boys (1991)</b><br />
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This album is probably known for it's cover art than it's actual musical content. It notably features band member Bushwick Bill sitting on a hospital gurney after suffering a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the face, which cost him his right eye.<br />
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As far as subject matter goes, it sticks pretty tight to the standard Geto Boys fare; gangsta shit, and hood life. It's what Geto Boys do best though, and they arguably did it it better than anybody in the early 90's.<br />
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<b>#57 <i>Death Certificate</i> - Ice Cube (1991)</b><br />
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Often times when an artist debuts with a classic album, they find themselves saddled with unrealistic expectations for the followup to that album. Listeners expect an artist to be able to create something even better once they've established themselves and have more resources at their disposal. Most wind up being considered disappointments. Nas, Snoop Dogg, and Raekwon all wound up being victims of their debut's success.<br />
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Ice Cube was in a similar boat in 1991. <i>AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted</i> had been considered a smashing success, and listeners were eager for a followup. Cube absolutely delivered. <i>Death Certificate</i> features better rhymes, a more impactful delivery, and funkier beats. You'll notice AmeriKKKa's most wanted landed a few spots higher on the list, though. The content of Death Certificate really weighs it down. The vitriol becomes exhausting to listen to. Whether it's directed at NWA, or Koreans, or just the condition of the urban poor, this album is just anger end to end.<br />
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Also, it's pretty weak that he waited until after his first release had been successful to make a real beef track towards NWA. <br />
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<b>#56 <i>Moment of Truth</i> - Gang Starr (1998)</b><br />
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It's an unfortunate rarity it hip-hop for artists to maintain a high level for as long as Gang Starr did. <i>Moment of Truth</i> was their fifth album in just under ten years, and it still manages to sound fresh and new. Preemo seemingly expanded his sample source pool drastically in the years between Hard to Earn and Moment of Truth. Guru is also on top of his game here, having updated his delivery a bit.<br />
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<b>#55 <i>A Prince Among Thieves</i> - Prince Paul (1999)</b><br />
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Concept albums have been a thing in hip-hop for a long time, but few albums before, or since <i>A Prince Among Thieves</i> have dedicated themselves to telling a clear, coherent narrative. It's more like musical theater than it is a concept album. The plot largely happens via a series of skits, with the actual songs serving more as interludes to introduce new characters or set the stage for the next part of the story.<br />
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Prince Paul's production does an excellent job establishing the atmosphere of every scene, and a myriad of guest MCs are cast to play individual roles in the story. Kool Keith, in particular, plays a very convincing crazy arms dealer in "Crazy Lou's Hideout" and "Weapon World". The main weakness of this album is that the two lead characters, Tariq and True, are played by two relative unknowns, and they often times are shown up by the guest appearances.<br />
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<b>#54 <i>Innercity Griots</i> - Freestyle Fellowship (1993)</b><br />
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Aceyalone, we meet again. Freestyle Fellowship, was a group consisting of Acey, fellow Haiku D'Etat member, Myka 9 and two gentleman who, unfortunately, have largely been lost to history in Self Jupiter and P.E.A.C.E. Production wise, it's undoubtedly the best album Acey has ever been on. It's got an energy about it that later releases just lacked. The energetic, even frantic verses that Freestyle Fellowship drop here really showcase the versatility that they had even this early in their careers. The fact that this release came so early on in their careers is what ultimately holds this album back somewhat, though. Acey and Myka 9 are both rappers who trended upwards in their abilities over time. So while the beats are actually pretty decent for a change, the rapping itself isn't quite on the level of <i>All Balls Don't Bounce</i> or <i>Haiku D'Etat</i>.<br />
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<b>#53 <i>AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted</i> - Ice Cube (1990)</b><br />
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After a messy breakup with NWA, the pressure was on for Ice Cube to deliver a quality solo album. AmeriKKKa's most wanted shows that his grievances (namely, that he wasn't being paid enough considering how much of the work load he was bearing) with NWA were completely warranted. While NWA floundered and eventually broke up without their lead vocalist, Cube's career would blossom into one of the West Coast's best. One of my favorite aspects of AmeriKKKa's Most is the contrast in production style from Cube's NWA work. The Bomb Swuad's beats really do a great job showcasing Cube's lyrical talents, which were a step or two above anybody else on the West Coast at the time.<br />
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<b>#52 <i>Capital Punishment</i> - Big Pun (1998)</b><br />
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Big Pun really stands out from the crowd of late 90's MCs because of his rapid fire, high rhyme density flow. The fact that he weighed in at almost 700 pounds made his already insane breath control all the more impressive. Putting very lyrically dense bars over beats that were essentially club bangers ended up being a winning formula for Pun, and Capital Punishment got him a reputation of one of hip-hop's great young artists. Unfortunately he was dead of a heart attack within a year of it's release, and a really great followup album never happened. Despite his exceptionally short career, at least Pun can put on his resume that he's one of the few people who have straight up outperformed Black Thought on a track. ("Super Lyrical")<br />
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<b>#51<i> One Day It'll All Make Sense</i> - Common (1997)</b><br />
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If Common didn't have such a strong discography, this album would get more credit nowadays than it it does. As it is, it often get's overlooked in favor of his other classic releases. More so than any of Common's other albums, <i>One Day It'll All Make Sense</i> will have a lasting impact on the listener. Com's fears and concerns about the responsibilities of becoming a father are palpable. The production is a bit lacking compared to most of Com's other releases, though.<br />
<br />Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-15317922957086806502014-06-16T02:14:00.000-05:002014-06-16T02:14:29.387-05:00Top 90 Albums of the 90's: 70-61<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgNRW5ZqeP3hnBS5Nt3iBxGTLojH_-Z0U-ZEo6SYu19Z-rLU5FtGs1Ao0O2GrRB8TrFzMsgANNCiOmQPmV7_svt-MjtHyxrvr-OAO7ZudPNBp7ca_uRDcaEa0kUF41MAD8HOr1pQRbkwaQ/s1600/Organized+Konfusion.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgNRW5ZqeP3hnBS5Nt3iBxGTLojH_-Z0U-ZEo6SYu19Z-rLU5FtGs1Ao0O2GrRB8TrFzMsgANNCiOmQPmV7_svt-MjtHyxrvr-OAO7ZudPNBp7ca_uRDcaEa0kUF41MAD8HOr1pQRbkwaQ/s1600/Organized+Konfusion.jpg" height="226" width="400" /></a></div>
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<b>#70 <i>The War Report</i> - Capone-N-Noreaga (1997)</b><br />
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Even with Capone serving jail time for a decent percentage of the recording, <i>The War Report</i> still wound up as a surprisingly great album. I'm not one who generally is a huge fan of "hardcore" hip-hop, but I can't help but bob my head to this album. Tragedy Khadafi turns up on probably half the tracks on the album, including the standout "Calm Down" alongside Nas. This album often gets credited with more or less killing mafioso rap and bringing hardcore back to hip-hop's forefront. <br />
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<b>#69 <i>One For All</i> - Brand Nubian (1990)</b><br />
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<i>One For All</i> has all the strongest qualities of <i>In God We Trust</i>, without the Islamic extremest rhetoric weighing it down. That's not to say there aren't definite Five Percenter themes here, quite the contrary, they're everywhere. Grand Puba's Brand Nubian just aren't as overtly militant or inflammatory. This album is actually pretty light and fun.<br />
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<b>#68 <i>Stakes is High</i> - De La Soul (1996)</b><br />
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<i>Stakes is High</i> showing up this high will probably be a surprise to some, but I maintain that this album gets underrated. Prince Paul leaving the group was definitely a major blow, but it by no means mortally injured De La. <i>Stakes is High</i> is a great album because De La was one of the groups to recognize that the popular hip-hop at the time wasn't healthy for the listeners, the artists, or the genre, and that hip-hop would soon be faced with an identity crisis, and a choice would need to be made as to what direction the genre would go. The model of just having not particularly skilled MCs throw violent threats at each other from across the country wasn't sustainable. <i>Stakes is High</i> is an album that put the whole hip-hop and general music industry on blast, and they were completely right. The context is what makes this album great more so than the actual technical aspects.<br />
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Oh, and this is also Mos Def's debut.<br />
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<b>#67 <i>The Carnival</i> - Wyclef Jean (1997)</b><br />
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This release feels a little out of place on the list, since it incorporates so many of the non-traditional hip-hop influences. It probably dedicates less time to rapping than any other album on the list. The Carnival often times feels like... well, a carnival with all the different musical influences it's trying to incorporate. I wouldn't be surprised if Wyclef had wanted this album to be significantly longer than it ended up being, there's almost too much variety here.<br />
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<b>#66 <i>Tical</i> - Method Man (1994)</b><br />
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Method Man was dubbed the member of Wu-Tang who had the most popular appeal in the wake of Enter the Wu-Tang. As such, he was tasked with being the first member to put out a solo release. Even though it's not held in quite the esteem as some of the other Wu solo albums that followed it, it'd be hard to argue that Tical wasn't a smashing success. This record features some of RZA's best beats, which Meth attacks with a level of ferocity that you wouldn't expect given his public persona.<br />
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<b>#65 <i>Word... Life</i> - O.C. (1994)</b><br />
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As you read through this list you'll probably start to notice a theme. A lot of the lesser known albums are from 1994. A glut of extremely popular and acclaimed albums being released that year made it so there are a handful of great albums that tend to not get much recognition, simply because they were and still are overshadowed by the likes of <i>Tical, Illmatic, Ready to Die, Resurrection,</i> and <i>The Diary</i>. <br />
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D.I.T.C's O.C. is one of the artists who saw probably their best work fall through the cracks somewhat. O.C. is a very solid MC, and the production is outstanding. Unfortunately, the track "Time's Up" is really all <i>Word... Life</i> get's remembered for these days.<br />
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<b>#64 <i>I Wish My Brother George Was Here</i> - Del the Funky Homosapien (1991)</b><br />
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First off, I'd just like to thank Ice Cube for making this album possible. Del is Cube's cousin, and the knowledge that he'd be looking over Del's shoulder during the production is what got Del his first record deal, at the tender age of 18.<br />
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Now that that's out of the way... I feel like this would have been a better album if Ice Cube hadn't been involved. While Brother George is still significantly wittier, funkier, and funnier than anything the West Coast was producing at the time, it still comes off as a fairly conservative release when compared to future releases by Del and his crew.<br />
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<b>#63 <i>Don't Sweat the Technique</i> - Eric B. & Rakim (1992)</b><br />
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Out of the Rakim releases that actually get talked about, <i>Don't Sweat the Technique</i> seems to be considered the weakest. I wholeheartedly agree, Rakim just isn't quite on the same level here as he was on <i>Paid in Full</i> or <i>Follow the Leader, </i>he's still great, just not quite legendary. It's important to note that there were two members of Eric B and Rakim, though. Despite getting top billing, Eric B's contributions are often overlooked. I would argue that this is Eric B's best album. That is enough to put it above <i>18th Letter</i> and <i>Let the Rhythm Hit Em</i>.<br />
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<b>#62 <i>Live and Let Die</i> - Kool G Rap & DJ Polo (1992)</b><br />
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Kool G Rap is a guy that shows up in most top 10 MC of all time lists, and I still think he's underrated. His rhyme schemes were years ahead of their time and, as such, his music holds up way better to the modern ear than does that of his late 80's and early 90's peers. His biggest weakness is that he wound up being too influential to future MCs. Vivid depictions of committing felonies became a hip-hop cliche, and extensive use of internal rhymes became the norm by the mid 90's. Live and Let Die falls a little bit on the list because of how long it runs, the shtick starts to wear a bit thin by the end.<br />
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<b>#61 <i>Stress: The Extinction Agenda</i> - Organized Konfusion (1994)</b><br />
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Oh, look, another underrated 1994 release<i>. Stress</i> is a noticeably darker album than Organized Konfusion's debut. During my first couple listens of <i>Stress</i>, I really did miss the lighter, poppier tracks, but going back and listening to it now, I have no idea why. Part of what makes Stress great is that little it of extra grit, it keeps OK from straying too far into weird just for the sake of weird territory. This is really that earned Pharoahe Monch his reputation as one of hip-hop's premier lyricists, he's downright jaw dropping at times. In fact, my biggest complaint about Stress would probably be that next to Monch, Prince Po's verses feel very amateurish. The disparity in their abilities is too apparent; it's distracting.<br />
<br />Banjohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14522575346857965146noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-75662264913554109522014-06-14T23:40:00.000-05:002014-06-14T23:40:07.979-05:00Top 90 Albums of the 90's: 80-71<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<b>#80 <i>Soul on Ice</i> - Ras Kass (1995)</b><br />
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Before he had even released an album, Ras Kass had already made a name for himself via a series of standout features. He brought a level of lyricism to the table that nobody else who was popular on the West Coast really had at that point, so his debut album, <i>Soul on Ice</i> was highly anticipated. Long story short, it didn't really sell and Kass's career wound up being a flop. Despite poor sales, Soul on Ice is still an album held in high esteem by lyrical purists, with good reason. You can only do so much with barely serviceable beats, though.<br />
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<b>#79 <i>Hard to Earn</i> - Gang Starr (1994)</b><br />
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For whatever reason, Gang Starr decided to abandon the level-headed thoughtful themes that got them such acclaim n their first couple releases, and instead make an album with a significantly harsher tone. Personally, I like Gang Starr a lot better when they're not trying to act hard. DJ Premier absolutely carries this album, though. I don't know if he's ever been better than he is on <i>Hard to Earn</i>. Listening to his beats is more than enough reason to give this album several listens.<br />
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<b>#78 <i>A Wolf in Sheep's Clothing</i> - Black Sheep (1991)</b><br />
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Black Sheep is a group that often gets overlooked because of the company they kept. It's hard to stand out when you're crew-mates with De La Soul and A Tribe Called Quest. Nevertheless, while the MC's of Black Sheep weren't really exceptional from a technical standpoint, they brought a lot of energy and smart, humor to their tracks, kind of like an early 90's Little Brother. Self-depreciation is a major running theme, even on the intro skit, they go out of their way to point out that they're the least popular members of their crew. <br />
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<b>#77 <i>The 18th Letter</i> - Rakim (1997)</b><br />
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This was the first time Rakim had released an album since 1992's <i>Don't Sweat the Technique</i>, it signals a significant change in tone from his previous releases. Ra sounds noticably more aggressive than on his 80's classics, likely due to this being the first time he was recording an album without long time collaborator Eric B. Eric B's presence isn't really missed, and getting to hear an MC of Ra's caliber work with the likes of DJ Premier and Pete Rock is a treat.<br />
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<b>#76 <i>People's Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm</i> - A Tribe Called Quest (1990)</b><br />
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Before <i>The Low End Theory</i> and <i>Midnight Marauders</i> catapulted Tribe into hip-hop legend status, there was People's Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm, their exceptionally long-titled debut album. It's a light-hearted, positive affair that didn't get much fanfare at the time because the listening public wanted to hear gangsta stuff. It's a smooth, jazzy affair that features Q-Tip and Phife trading verses back and forth with the occasional guest stopping by to add their $0.02. <br />
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<b>#75 <i>Stunts, Blunts, & Hip-Hop</i> - Diamond D (1992)</b><br />
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<i>Stunts</i> is one of the early classics from Lord Finesse's Diggin' in the Crates Crew. Most of the rapping is nothing to right home about, and a handful of the tracks probably could have been left off, but the production is excellent end-to-end.<br />
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<b>#74 </b><b><i>Runaway Slave</i> - Showbiz & A.G. (1992)</b><br />
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.... and released on the same day, from the same crew is Showbiz & A.G.'s <i>Runaway Slave</i>. A.G. is really what elevates this album above <i>Stunts</i>. He rhymes effortlessly over Showbiz's sometimes cacophonous beats. Showbiz himself isn't a slouch on the mic, either.<br />
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<b>#73 <i>Buhloone Mindstate</i> - De La Soul (1993)</b><br />
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<i>Buhloone Mindstate</i> falls in a weird spot spot where it is so universally considered under-rated, that I would argue that it's a bit over-rated. It's a tighter, more focused effort than their iconic debut and sophomore albums, but in doing so, they lost a bit of what had made De La unique and interesting. Nonetheless, it makes great background music, and "Ego Trippin' Part 2" is an iconic track.<br />
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<b>#72 <i>Doggystyle</i> - Snoop Doggy Dogg (1993)</b><br />
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Much like <i>Dogg Food</i>, <i>Doggystyle</i>'s biggest flaw is that it doesn't bring much to the table that we hadn't already seen on <i>The Chronic</i>. The beats are what <i>Doggystyle</i> is most known for, while the lyrics are generally considered to be a weakness. I can't entirely disagree with that assessment, I don't feel like adding Talib Kweli caliber lyricism to <i>Doggystyle</i> would have added much. It's an album that's meant to be felt rather than listened to critically.<br />
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<b>#71 <i>All Balls Don't Bounce</i> - Aceyalone (1995)</b><br />
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What do you know? Another Aceyalone project with outstanding vocals and decidedly mediocre production. However, unlike on <i>Haiku D'Etat</i>, <i>All Ball Don't Bounce</i>'s production at least features plenty of variety, so it doesn't turn into quite as much of a drag by the end. Banjohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14522575346857965146noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-81582407346697599102014-06-14T05:47:00.007-05:002014-06-14T05:50:50.114-05:00Top 90 Albums of the 90's: 90-81<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Despite the mid to late 80's commonly receiving the title of hip-hop's "Golden Age", I've found that the vast majority of people who consider themselves to be hip-hop heads consider the 90's to be the strongest time period in hip-hop's history. The 90's is sacred territory in hip-hop, so making a list of the "best" albums is going to inevitably lead to at least some controversy. Someone's favorite album undoubtedly won't make the cut; I'm sure there are a few albums on here that I like way more than most. By the time this whole thing is over, I'm sure no one will be satisfied. On that note, let's get to ranking shall we?<br />
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<b> #90 <i>It's Dark and Hell is Hot</i> - DMX (1998)</b><br />
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He's mostly of a punch-line now, but early DMX had an energy about him that I don't think anybody has ever managed to successfully replicate. He was intimidating and imposing on a level that nobody else in the rap industry ever really has been.<i> It's Dark and Hell is Hot</i> is all about anger and violent impulses. It's an album that I rarely find myself sitting down and listening to cover-to-cover, but individual tracks turn up on my playlists pretty regularly. <br />
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<b> #89 <i>Dogg Food</i> - The Dogg Pound (1995)</b><br />
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This is one that most probably would have expected to see a bit higher on the list. It's considered one of the essential G-Funk albums, right alongside the likes of <i>Doggystyle</i>, and <i>The Chronic</i>. So what lands it in the late 80's rather than further up, alongside its compatriots (spoiler alert)? Basically, that it came later. <i>The Chronic</i> was revolutionary, <i>Doggystyle</i> epitomized the genre, by the time<i> Dogg Food</i> comes out in 1995, it just starts to feel like the west coast is recycling old material. It's still a good album, it's just hard to give it much credit when all Kurupt and Daz needed to do was follow a format already laid out for them.<br />
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<b> #88<i> Business As Usual</i> - EPMD (1990)</b><br />
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<i> Business as Usual</i> is an album that gets kind of a bad rap sometimes for not being good as their debut, <i>Strictly Business</i>. I can't argue with that sentiment. <i>Strictly Business</i> could make a strong argument for being the best album of the 80's, though. The defining characteristic of <i>Business as Usual</i> is the number of samples it uses. I don't think there's a track on this album that doesn't feature at least one, several feature five or more. Also, Redman makes his debut on the album's second track, so there's that.<br />
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<b> #87 <i>Ridin' Dirty</i> - UGK (1996)</b><br />
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Any album that came out the South in the mid 90's deserves to be recognized. Other than Geto Boys, there really hadn't been any artists from the region that had scene much success, at the time. <i>Ridin' Dirty</i> is one of a handful of albums that came out the South all around the same time, that managed to catapult a relatively unknown scene onto the national stage at a time when East Coast - Wast Coast rivalries were dominating the headlines. While other prominent southern acts at the time were making names for themselves by being weird, UGK took a more traditional approach; some minimalist, groovy beats, with two MCs trading verses about money, clothes. and hoes.<br />
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<b> #86 <i>Haiku D'Etat</i> - Haiku D'Etat (1999)</b><br />
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Aceyalone is an MC who will never get enough credit. He's a stronger rapper than almost all of his west coast underground compatriots, but has never seen the same level of success or acclaim as guys like Del the Funky Homosapien or Gift of Gab. Haiku D'Etat is a super group consisting of Acey, and fellow MCs Mikah 9 and Abstract Rude. It features some of the most technically adept rapping to be found on this list but, much like pretty much everything else Aceyalone has ever been a part of, it kind of falls on it's face from a production standpoint. It tries to carry a relaxed, floaty vibe throughout the whole album, by the end it just winds up being more boring than anything.<br />
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<b> #85 <i>Do You Want More?!!!?!</i> - The Roots (1995)</b><br />
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Black Thought, ?uestlove, and co. have been putting out great albums for so long at this point that it's kind of bizarre to imagine them as young upstarts needing to prove their worth to their label. The pressure didn't seem to get to them, though. In fact, my biggest criticism would be that they spend too much time just nonchalantly grooving with no real rhyme or reason.<br />
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<b> #84 <i>In God We Trust</i> - Brand Nubian (1993)</b><br />
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Grand Puba leaving Brand Nubian signaled a major gear shift for them. <i>In God We Trust</i> carries a decidedly more militant tone than their first release, and laced throughout are references to Five Percenter rhetoric that will be seen as extreme by most listeners. Even if the inflammatory lyrical content doesn't suit your fancy,<i> In God We Trust</i> is worth a spin just for the fun, jazzy beats.<br />
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<b> #83 <i>Let the Rhythm Hit Em</i> - Eric B. & Rakim (1990)</b><br />
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It doesn't get quite the acclaim that Eric B. & Rakim's 80's releases did, but<i> Let the Rhythm Hit Em</i> is still commonly regarded as an all-time classic. Honestly, the biggest thing holding this album back is that there aren't any tracks that really stand out from the crowd. It's a good cover-to-cover listen, but no one track is going to be stuck in your head after.<br />
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<b> #82 <i>Return to 36 Chambers: The Dirty Version</i> - Ol' Dirty Bastard (1995)</b><br />
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It often gets overshadowed by the other great 90's Wu-Tang releases, but <i>Return to 36 Chambers</i> is a personal favorite of mine. RZA really outdoes himself with the production, but ODB is the unquestioned star of the album. His distinctive half-sung, half-rapped delivery is what ODB is most known for, unfortunately is lyrical prowess often gets overlooked.<br />
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<b> #81 <i>Steal This Album</i> - The Coup (1998)</b><br />
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If you've never heard the track "Me and Jesus the Pimp in a '79 Grenada Last Night", go do that as soon as possible, you can thank me later.<br />
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While "'79 Grenada" is the clear standout track from <i>Steal This Album</i>, the rest of the album is fantastic, as well. Boots Riley will probably rub some the wrong way with his Communist political beliefs, but even the coldest of Cold Warriors will find themselves bobbing their heads for most of this album". The Coup has always has a penchant for riding the line between humor & entertainment value, and scathing social commentary, or even openly militant rhetoric. It takes a master of his craft to make violent political upheavel sound this fun.<br />
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<br />Banjohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14522575346857965146noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-81064720445908448622014-06-13T02:53:00.003-05:002014-06-13T02:59:49.294-05:00Deltron 3030 - Event 2 (2013)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Yesterday, in my <a href="http://banjoreviewhiphop.blogspot.com/2014/06/eminem-marshall-mathers-lp-2-2013.html"><i>Marshall Mathers LP 2</i> review</a>, I wrote briefly about the risks that go into making a sequel album. Basically, what it comes down to is an artist putting more of their reputation at stake in exchange for more hype leading up to an album's release. I just so happen to be reviewing another sequel album today, Deltron 3030's <i>Event 2</i>. <i>Event 2</i> is the 2013 sequel to Deltron 3030's self-titled debut album, which came out in 2000. The original <i>Deltron 3030</i> is regarded as an underground classic. Those of you who have been reading for a while know that I cite it as my personal favorite album. As such, I've been waiting with bated breath for the group's second release. Work apparently was being done on it as far back as 2004, but it was continuously delayed for any of a grab-bag's worth of reasons until 2013.<br />
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When the narrative behind an albums release is continuous delays spanning the better part of a decade, upon release, the obvious question is whether or not it was worth the wait. If you had asked me back in October, when it was released, my answer would have been an emphatic "no". I may have even gotten a little mouth froth on you, such was my disappointment. I even set out to write this review back then, so that I might enlighten the world to the travesty that was <i>Event 2</i>. Luckily, laziness prevailed and I've come to appreciate <i>Event 2</i> a bit over these last few months.<br />
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"Banjo, what got you so upset on your first listen?" you're probably asking yourself. It was something that I touched on in yesterday's <i>Marshall Mathers LP 2</i> review. Namely, finding the sweet spot where your sequel album manages to capture the same tone or feel to the previous installment, without coming across as a copy. My initial reaction to Event 2 was that it was just a worse version of <i>Deltron 3030</i>, a cheap knock-off, the Dr. Thunder to <i>Delton</i>'s Dr. Pepper. In retrospect, I may have overreacted. <i>Event 2</i> definitely adheres too closely to the formula of the original album, with a few tracks that are just shameless knock-offs (looking at you, "The Return") but it's a very respectable album in its own right, as well.<br />
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Del the Funky Homosapien had been floundering for ten plus years leading up the release of <i>Event 2 </i>Conflict with his record label kept him from releasing anything for the entire middle third of the 00's. Once that was sorted out, he put out a slew of releases to lukewarm, at best, receptions. As somewhat of a Del fanboy, I was hoping (but not particularly optimistic) that he had just been squirreling away his best verses to use on <i>Event 2</i>. After all it, it is the sequel to his most popular and most highly esteemed project. I can't speak to how long it actually took Del to write and record his verses for Event 2, I can confidently that he sounds better here than he has on anything since <i>Full Circle</i>, in 2003. The bored, monotone, drawling vocals that made so many of his 2008-2012 releases such boring chores to listen to has been greatly dialed back on <i>Event 2</i>. Del actually sounds like he's enjoying himself somewhat, again. He still doesn't carry quite the same exuberance that he once did, but rather than sounding bored or disinterested, it feels more like he's just relaxed, somewhat. He feels comfortable.<br />
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Much like in Deltron 3030, Event 2 features the vocal talents of several others besides Del. Joseph Gordon-Levitt catches us p on what all has happened in the universe since between the two albums on the album's introductory skit. David Cross and Amber Tamblyn appear in a pair of skits featuring a married couple griping about all the "conveniences" that future technology has brought, while not-so-subtly taking jabs at the lifestyle and mannerisms of Millenials. Celebrity chef, David Chang's skit is definitely the worst of the bunch. The concept of having someone talk about the future of how food is prepared and what the tastes of the general public are was sound enough, it just sounded like it hadn't been rehearsed. <br />
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As far as musical guests, The Lonely Island get a track all to themselves smack in the middle of the album (much like Paul Barman did in the original) where they play the role of a group of old men who burst into verse about how much better it was "Back in the Day". It's a track that would be a lot funnier were it not for the ham-fisted attempt to make it about the plight of the homeless tacked on at the end. Other stand out musical guests were Rage Against the Machine's Zach De La Rocha, and actress, Mary Elizabeth Winstead. Winstead shows surprising singing chops on her two appearances, handling the choruses on two the album's standout tracks. <br />
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Dan The Automator is someone who I, honestly, haven't kept particular track of as of late. I couldn't testify as to what hes been up to since the last Handsome Boy Modeling School album back in 2004. As such, I was a bit concerned about the production coming into my first listen. I will never again question the credentials of Automator. Even when I completely despised and resented this album, I couldn't help but acknowledge that the production was top shelf. A big part of what made the original Deltron 3030 such a success was the the tone set by Automator's beats. They did more to establish the setting of the album than Del's vocal's ever could; the crowded cities, the ever-present threat of government agents, the limitless vastness of the galaxy in which the story takes place... none of it would have been nearly as engrossing if not for Automator. No other producer could have made <i>Deltron 3030</i> a more effective album than Automator did. To put it shortly, Automator hasn't lost a step. The environment he's portraying is a bit gloomier, and the situation our protagonists face is a bit more dire now than it once, but he captures that just as well. Some of the beats come across as a bit Jetson-y in 2013, that is, the way people thought that the future (today) would sound in the 60's, whether or not that was a conscious choice by Automator, I can't say.<br />
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Therein lies the biggest fault in <i>Event 2</i>. Where <i>Deltron 3030</i> told the story of a scrappy group of freedom fighters and their adventures through a futuristic dystopia, <i>Event 2 </i>throws all of its eggs squarely into the social commentary basket. Yes, <i>Deltron</i> featured a hefty helping of social criticism, but it was a side dish to the journey, itself. The commentary was interwoven so that it was a part of the story, it wasn't intrusive. <i>Event 2</i> tackles social issues in a much more heavy-handed way. With the story taking a back seat to the message, <i>Event 2</i> loses a major part of what made <i>Deltron 3030</i> so successful, the fun. Yeah, there are a handful of chuckle-worthy skits dispersed throughout the whole affair, but they feel out of place when wedged between tracks about the loss of childhood innocence and the Earth being reduced to a barren wasteland largely due to corporate greed.<br />
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So, that brings us back to our original question. Was <i>Event 2</i> worth the wait? Not in my opinion. It just doesn't hold up to their first release. Does that make it a bad album? Absolutely not. The biggest mistake that Deltron 3030 made with <i>Event 2</i> was billing it as a sequel. They tasked themselves with having to pick up a story where they left off 13 years beforehand. That story shifting in tone somewhat and coming off a little disjointed was inevitable. <i>Event 2</i> remains an atmospheric album featuring some of the best production I've heard in years, and a legendary MC in his best form in over a decade. This album didn't deserve nearly the hate that I, and many others gave it on release. Unfortunately, first impressions are hard to forget, so Event 2 will likely wind up being an album that never gets the appreciation that it deserves.<br />
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Best Tracks: Nobody Can, Melding of the Minds, The Agony, Look Across the Sky, Do You Remember<br />
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Overall: 82/100Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-18869156047362673972014-06-12T01:15:00.001-05:002014-06-12T01:15:03.274-05:00Eminem - Marshall Mathers LP 2 (2013)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-9W0Yrx9kd0Q/U5kMwrTnEVI/AAAAAAAAAbE/RFNLxmrf2iU/s1600/Marshall+Mathers+LP+2.png" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-9W0Yrx9kd0Q/U5kMwrTnEVI/AAAAAAAAAbE/RFNLxmrf2iU/s1600/Marshall+Mathers+LP+2.png" height="320" width="320" /></a>For artists, sequel albums are a double-edged sword. On one hand, billing an album as a sequel to a critical or fan favorite generates more hype for a release than it otherwise would have gotten. On the other hand, you're basically challenging your listeners to compare it to the previous release. If the album holds up to those comparisons, it can be a huge boon for the artists career. Raekwon's <i>Only Built 4 Cuban Linx Pt. 2</i>, and Nas's <i>Stillmatic</i> both stand out as cases where sequel albums gave a much needed bump to their respective artist's faltering careers. However, if a sequel isn't well received, it only functions as a shining example of how far an artist has fallen since their peak. It can be a death sentence for a career. Warren G, and Twista come to mind as artists who have fallen into irrelevance following a poorly executed sequel album. Eminem decided to throw his hat into the sequel ring with 2013's <i>Marshall Mathers LP 2</i> (<i>MMLP2</i>).<br />
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One of the hardest parts of creating a good sequel album is managing to capture the tone and sound of the original without coming across as a just a knock-off, there's a relatively narrow sweet spot that needs to be hit in order to be successful. Stray too far from the original, and fans will accuse you of just using the name as a cash grab and resent you for it. Stick too close to the formula and your album will be regarded as just a worse version of the original and panned by fans, if not necessarily critics. Em treads dangerously close to the former issue with <i>MMLP2</i>. <br />
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Were it not for the track "Bad Guy" and the album being named <i>Marshall Mathers LP 2</i>, I may have never caught on that it was supposed to be a sequel. There's a few nods to the original scattered throughout, but the overall sound doesn't come across as being any more influenced by the original than Em's previous couple of albums. It uses the same garbage rock influenced beats that plagued <i>Recovery</i> and, once again, inexplicably features a healthy serving of Eminem trying to sing. The presence of someone like Rihanna as a featured artist also strikes me as something that the Eminem of 2000 wouldn't have done. <br />
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The one saving grace to <i>MMLP2</i> in the "hitting the sweet spot" department is that it's a noticeable throw-back to the original <i>Marshall Mathers LP</i> (<i>MMLP)</i> as far as subject matter, when compared to his previous few releases. He finally moves on past the mopey recovering drug addict narrative, and goes back to the topics that made him famous in the first place: self-depreciation, ridiculing of the entertainment industry, and his shitty childhood. After having his last album be primarily about how much he's changed and how hes trying to be a better person, reverting back to his old subject matter comes across as somewhat insincere, though. What used to come across as exorcising personal demons or just venting frustrations now feels more like shock value for shock value's sake. That being said, Em's rhymes are on point from a technical standpoint. The fact that he is still able to impress with his verses this far into his career, is really a testament to his credentials as one of the greatest to ever pick up the mic. Even if his flow is awkward, even clumsy at times, his wordplay is as good as it's ever been... even if he does get shown up by Kendrick Lamar on "Love Game". <br />
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The thing that weighs this album down isn't Eminem, it's everything around him. <i>MMLP2</i> is an album that is desperately trying to adhere to the current pop culture conventions while pretending to resent them. For whatever reason they decided it would be a good idea to bring in Rick Rubin, who apparently thought that the best way to capture the sound of the original <i>MMLP</i> was to use a bunch of very recognizable samples from thirty to fifty year old rock songs, despite <i>MMLP</i> featuring nothing of the sort. Whoever keeps telling Eminem that he's a good singer needs to go away. Songs like "Stronger Than I Was" are borderline unlistenable. Even the tracks where he just sings the hooks become instantly worse for it.<br />
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In short, <i>Marshall Mathers LP 2</i> still has many of the same issues that held back his previous couple releases. Looking back at the <i><a href="http://banjoreviewhiphop.blogspot.com/2013/03/eminem-recovery-2010.html">Recovery</a> </i>review I wrote a few years ago, most of those same criticisms are still very valid. Em is still a horrible singer. The presence of major pop artists still feels like a betrayal (even if his Rihanna collabs are pretty good). His pop culture references are still outdated. His choice of samples is still questionable. He's still showing flashes of greatness with his verses, though and it still gives me hope that Em has another great album in him, if he can ever manage to get the right people around him. <i>MMLP2</i> just isn't that album.<br />
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Best Tracks: Rap God, Monster, Bad Guy<br />
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Overall: 70/100<br />
<br />Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-50709795069062168022013-12-30T00:22:00.001-06:002013-12-30T00:22:39.582-06:00Cannibal Ox - The Cold Vein (2001)For my millions of fans out there that closely follow Review Hip-Hop, you may have noticed that this album has been mentioned in a handful of my posts. <i>The Cold Vein </i>is one of those albums that most will hear mentioned very early on in their trek through the underground hip-hop world. It's frequently cited as one of the most influential underground albums ever, as well as the best album that the Def Jux camp put out during their run as the most prominent underground label, in the early 00's. I'm always wary of albums that get called "the best" of anything. Nine time out of ten, those albums are a disappointment. Still, there's that one time, where an album unquestionably lives up to the hype surrounding it. <i>The Cold Vein </i>is one of, if not the best, not only Def Jux album, but hip-hop album of the last fifteen years.<br />
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When I initially heard <i>The Cold Vein </i>I wasn't particularly impressed. I was something of lyrics snob at the time, and the abstract verses of Vast Aire and Vordul Mega didn't quite rub me the right way. I felt as though they were using a too many non-sequiturs, to the point of just spouting a bunch of rambling nonsense. It's an album that gets better every subsequent listen, though. Every time I spin <i>The Cold Vein</i>, I find some new line that I finally understand, or see in a different way. What I had initially thought were Ghostface Killah style non-sequiturs, were actually heavy social commentary about the state of American race relations and a vivid imagery of the poverty found in our cities. It's a portrait of violence, desperation, and hopelessness that can, at times, leave the listener, himself feeling distressed. There isn't another album that I've heard that can come close to putting me on the same emotional roller-coaster as <i>The Cold Vein.</i> From the inconsolable hopelessness of "Iron Galaxy," to the anger and frustration of "Pigeon," and cautious optimism of "Scream Phoenix," every track sticks its message perfectly.<br />
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Between the two emcees present, Vast has easily more memorable and impactful verses. That's not to say Vordul doesn't carry his own weight, quite the contrary, the album would undoubtedly be worse without his contribution. During my own personal listen, his more energized, easily digestible verses serve mostly as breaks to Vast's more dense and weighty verses, giving me a moment to breath and take in what I've just listened to. Treating him as such is a tremendous disservice, though. While his verses don't have nearly as many memorable lines, they're just as, if not more clever and complicated once you figure out what you're listening to. His verse on "Pigeon" is a great example, it legitimately took me years to figure out that half of his lines in that verse weren't just there to continue the rhyme.<br />
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It can't be overstated how important El-P was in the success of <i>The Cold Vein</i>. On release, he called it his best work, and he has yet to surpass it. As I said, this is an album that takes at least a handful of listens to truly enjoy, and the thing that kept getting me to re-listen time and time again, even when I wasn't really feeling Vast and Vordul, was the beats. Even if The Cold Vein was just an instrumental album, it would still be an essential listen for any self-respecting hip-hop head (in fact, there is an instrumental version called Cannibal Oxtrumentals). They go a long ways towards establishing the mood for the album on their own, and never come anywhere near boring or redundant. We're given ambiance, we're given bangers, but they all maintain a certain futuristic, or industrial tinge, that assures the listener that this isn't any mere collection of tracks, this is an album, and is meant to be listened to as such. There's a message here, and one track can't be fully understood without understanding the entire set. Ultimately, rather than individual beats, this cohesion was El-P's greatest contribution to <i>The Cold Vein. </i><br />
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One benefit I get to enjoy in reviewing primarily older albums is that there are always at least a few other reviews already written by the time I get around to them. I always take the time to read a few of these before I do my own. One thing I noticed in a handful of these other reviews was that, where I saw production that aided in creating a cohesive message for the album, others saw beats that were similar to the point of being forgettable. This isn't wrong. You're probably not ever going to have any of these beats stuck in your head. Many of them do sound very similar. Many of them are relatively arrhythmic. There isn't a single one that I could honestly call "catchy." However, I can't stress enough how little this matters. This was never an album that was supposed to be about the beats, the message is what matters.<br />
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The Cold Vein is an album that rose up from the dark underbelly of New York City. It was born of poverty, violence, hopelessness, frustration, and anger. It can be weighty, and even upsetting, at times. Don't take that to mean it's all doom and gloom, though. It's not merely Vast Aire and Vordul Mega expounding upon their disgust for the world in which they grew up. It's an album meant to change that world for the better. It's pointing out problems and their causes not out of disgust, but so that steps can be taken towards correcting them. Rather than treating the urban poor like something shameful that needs to be hidden away from society, <i>The Cold Vein</i> treats them like people; people who are doing the best they can with the opportunities they've been given. In the albums opening track, "Iron Galaxy", Vast raps:<br />
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"What you figure</div>
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That chalky outline on the ground is a father figure?</div>
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So he steps to the next stencil, that's a hustler</div>
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Infested with money and diamond clusters"</div>
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That line sums up <i>The Cold Vein</i> better than any other. How can conditions be expected to improve when children are growing up in a situation where the richest, most successful people around them are hustlers, especially if those children are already lacking strong authority figures? That's only going to start over the same cycle that lead to the aforementioned chalky outline.</div>
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Best Tracks:</div>
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Iron Galaxy, Atom, Real Earth, Pigeon, Scream Phoenix </div>
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Overall:</div>
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96/100</div>
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Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-83391184773743826772013-03-31T20:50:00.000-05:002017-12-18T13:07:17.190-06:00Mr. Muthafuckin' eXquire - Lost in Translation (2011)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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I'll be honest with you, folks. I'm having a hell of a time figuring out where to start with this one. I guess the cover art(?) is as good a place as any to kick this off. It features a fairly voluptuous, blue-haired woman, throwing back a .40, while sitting on the toilet. Meanwhile, our protagonist, Mr. Muthafuckin' (don't forget the Muthafuckin') eXquire, is in the background bent over the bathtub, presumably vomiting. If the cover piques your interest, the first track you're treated to is "Triple F<i>," </i>eXquire's preemptive warning to those who would try to leach off the income his music career will inevitably land him. For a guy who was working in a parking garage this time two years ago, he shows impressive confidence in his ability to build his rapping into a real career. Oh, and "Triple F" features the word "fuck" approximately eighty times in three and a half minutes.<br />
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If you're even semi-familiar with New York underground hip-hop, you'll immediately recognize a few of the beats eXquire uses here. He recycles a number of old El-P beats, notably "Vein" and "Pigeon" off of <i>The Cold Vein </i>on "Chicken Spot Rock" and "Build-a-Bitch," respectively. Esoteric, Jake One, and Necro beats also make appearances. Some of the mixing, specifically early in the album, sounds pretty muddy. I can't tell if it's intentional, or not. It would fit the whole mystique that eXquire seems to be aiming for, but the production values are noticeably better on tracks towards the end. I can't really give eXquire too much credit for the beats, though. It was a very good selection, but most of them were almost directly ripped from other tracks.<br />
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Using classic, recognizable beats can be a double-edged sword. Yeah, you get to ensure that your tape is going to have great beats, but you're also going to inevitably draw comparisons to the original track, as Fashawn learned when he released <i>Ode to Illmatic</i> a few years back. eXquire manages to separate himself from the original tracks by dramatically shifting the tone and subject matter. For example, as I mentioned above, "Chicken Spot Rock" uses a beat originally from Cannibal Ox's "Vein." "Vein," is a track about how stereotypical portrayals of blacks can become a self-fulfilling prophecy, and how people need to embrace what makes them unique and transcend those stereotypes before they are destroyed by them. eXquire transformed it into an ode to fried chicken and liquor (I'm going to go ahead and assume/hope the irony there is intentional). The result is that you have two tracks with the same beat, but the intent is so different that it's impossible to really compare them against one another.<br />
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Seeing a guy throw a nod to the underground scene with his beats is refreshing, and was a definite treat for an El-P fan, such as myself, but what really makes <i>Lost in Translation </i>is eXquire, himself. I can't tell how much of eXquire is real, and how much is just stage persona, but I really don't care. Even if it's all an act, it's believable. He doesn't have any delusions of being a thug, he's just a struggling guy from the hood with an affinity for chicken, malt liquor, and good head. The general unimpressiveness of his life makes it seem that much more real. If it wasn't so funny, it might even be depressing. What does he have to gain by writing a track about urinating in public? It doesn't make him seem any more hardcore, it certainly doesn't make his life seem glamorous. It's the same type of uncomfortable honesty that propelled Danny Brown to fame.<br />
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Most of the tracks that will end up being remembered from Lost in Translation will be the ones with eXquire flaunting his over the top hood ruggedness. Spread throughout, though are tracks with a very different tone; a softer, more introspective tone. Tracks like "I Should Be Sleeping," "Weight of Water," and "Nuthin Even Matters (Regrets)" show a level of desperation and guilt not even hinted at in the other tracks. I feel like "Build-a-Bitch" was supposed to have a similarly serious tone. The track ultimately falls flat, though. He is clearly uncomfortable on it, and it ends up being one of the funnier tracks on a tape fully of chuckle-worthy tracks, as a result.<br />
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As a whole, the first half of the tape far outclasses the second half. Much of the energy found at the beginning of the album disappears after "Lou Ferigno's Mad." Both of the skits are barely smirk-worthy the first time you hear them, and become something you'll find yourself skipping on subsequent listens. "Lovesponge" represents the low point, though. It's a track that was supposed to be jokingly misogynistic, but ends up just being uncomfortable. "Galactus Redux" provides a much needed injection of energy, but has eXquire adopting a harder tone, which is unbecoming for him.<br />
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The final track, however, makes waiting through the previous six well worth it. Like many of you reading this, it's the track that first brought Mr. Muthafuckin' eXquire to my attention. "The Last Huzzah!" is an inarguably great track. eXquire's affinity for El-P beats paid off for him in spectacular fashion. He score an El-P feature, and with El-P comes fellow underground notables, Das Racist, Danny Brown, and Despot. El-P drops what might be the best verse of 2011 and Danny Brown sounds as good as he ever has. While eXquire's verse doesn't necessarily stand out among the crowd, he didn't exactly feel like he didn't fit among such company. I can only hope that more collaborations between this group will come in the future. <br />
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Ultimately, the highs of <i>Lost in Translation</i>, far overshadow the lows. It's a tape that could have done with having a few tracks left of the floor, but you can't really fault a guy for experimenting a bit on a free mixtape. Were this a studio album, I might be a little less inclined to give tracks like "Lovesponge" a pass, but for free? I'm glad to see a guy with a burgeoning career step out of his comfort zone a bit. It gives me faith that he's going to keep expanding his repertoire and not get stale like so many rappers do after their first handful of releases. <br />
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Best Tracks: "Huzzah!", "Chicken Spot Rock", "I Should Be Sleepin", "Nuthin Really Matters (Regrets)", "The Last Huzzah"<br />
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Overall: 82/100Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-59876666466737557662013-03-16T04:04:00.003-05:002013-03-16T04:04:27.970-05:00Top 50 Albums of the 2000's #1-10<br />
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#10 The Minstrel Show - Little Brother (2005)<br />
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BET has been propagating ignorant shit for quite a while now, but it wasn't until the release of this album that they openly admitted it. They famously refused to play the first single "Lovin It" because they deemed it "too intelligent" to be shown on BET. It's unfortunate that this album got embroiled in so much controversy (there was another incident with Source) because it's a fantastic album. The skits never get old, the production is outstanding, even the tracks that aren't particularly good are at least worth a chuckle. This is an album that is just plain fun to listen to. I love the variety show concept, too; even if the tracks don't exactly adhere to it strictly.<br />
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#9 Game Theory - The Roots (2006)<br />
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The Roots sound notably more aggressive and focused here than they had on their previous handful of releases. Whereas Phrenology, at times, felt like just experimentation for the sake of experimentation, Game Theory is concise and direct. Honestly, with the energy The Roots brought to the table, this record could have been completely empty of substance and I'd still probably love it. Quite the contrary, though. This arguably the most serious Roots album to date, taking on topics like violence in the media and the Iraq war as well as issues within the music industry and black community of which The Roots are a part.<br />
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#8 Be - Common (2005)<br />
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If there has ever been a better example of quality over quantity than Be, I haven't heard it (other than the obvious one...). It comes in at just 11 tracks and a shade over 40 minutes, but there isn't a skippable moment throughout the entire thing. It feels like a coming of age of sorts for Common. He'd crossed into his 30s, he had just joined up with GOOD Music and he was coming off of the lukewarm Electric Circus. I think Com stepped a little too far out of his comfort zone with Electric Circus and Be marks him getting back into his own skin and feeling comfortable there.<br />
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#7 The College Dropout - Kanye West (2004)<br />
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The thing that makes this album so great is how relatable the content is. Kanye doesn't try to act like he's hard, he doesn't try to act like he's better than you, he's just rapping about average, lower-middle class problems. While he still manages to pull some pretty big features, this isn't Kanye the super-star egomaniac, yet. This Kanye is still very human He's got a job in the mall, his teachers are questioning his life choices... he still has people around him that tell him "no" every once in a while. At the same time, it still carries Kanye's signature top-shelf production and technically average rapping.<br />
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#6 Madvillainy - Madvillain (2004)<br />
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At the time of this release, Madlib and MF DOOM were arguably the most prominent producer and MC in the underground scene, and yes, it is as blunted out as you would expect from these two. It's one of those album that you're either going to get and love, or absolutely miss the point and despise. A quick glance at the Metacritic page shows the most common user rating is 10. The second most common? 0. You'll either applaud Madlib's crate digging and DOOM's free-form verses, or find them mind-numbingly boring and self indulgent.<br />
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#5 Supreme Clientele - Ghostface Killah (2000)<br />
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While most of the Wu was going through a slump, Ghostface was doing exactly what he does best; be consistently top notch. In 2000, Wu's old sound was starting to feel a little played, and Ghost took the responsibility of updating it for the new millennium. Ghost's wordplay has never been better,and that's saying something. It's got all the Ghostism's (a word I just made up for words/phrases that Ghostface makes up) that that any listener could ever want. Just to show that this is still a Wu album, though, there is an excessive amount of time dedicated to skits. I guess some things never change.<br />
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#4 Blazing Arrow - Blackalicious (2002)<br />
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The quintessential Summer album, it's jazzy, upbeat and, above all else, fun. Gift of Gab is a gymnast on the mic, effortlessly switching between flows, without ever sacrificing an internal rhyme to do so. Gab steals the show here, for sure, but Chief Xcel holds up his end of the album, as well. Features by Hi-Tek, ?uestlove and Cut Chemist ensure that this is an album that has a ton of replay value, and the multitude of producers don't cripple the cohesiveness of the album in the slightest.<br />
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#3 The Cold Vein - Cannibal Ox (2001)<br />
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I could see this pick stirring up a little controversy. It doesn't seem like there is much of a middle ground with Cannibal Ox, you either love them or absolutely hate them. Obviously, I'm a member of the former group. The lyrics are abstract to the point of borderline incoherence, at times; if you try to break the songs down line by line, you'll drive yourself insane. After several listens, the message begins to clarify itself, and this is one the most vivid, personal, passionate portraits of urban poverty ever created. El-P has yet to surpass the beats he created for this album, as well. The dark, ominous production serves as a perfect backdrop to Vaste and Vordul's rhymes, ensuring their isn't an ounce of hope to be felt anywhere near The Cold Vein.<br />
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#2 Deltron 3030 - Deltron 3030 (2000)<br />
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Anybody who knows me predominantly as Banjo, knows that this is my all time favorite hip-hop album. It's a concept album about a distant future in which our protagonist, Deltron Zero, is a rogue hacker/mech warrior/rap battler and it follows his adventures on his way to the Intergalactic Rap Battle Competition. Along the way he has to avoid the forces of the evil Big Brother oligarchy that rules the year 3030. Dan, The Automator's production suits Del tha Funkee Homosapien's delivery perfectly. His haunting, futuristic beats combined with Del's propensity to draw out vowel sounds give the whole album a feeling like it's coming from a very distant place. Well... that and all the robots, aliens and magic. Beneath it all is a fair amount of social commentary, though. Specifically in regards to the nature of government, race relations and corporate greed.<br />
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#1 Like Water for Chocolate - Common (2000)<br />
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And here we are, the best hip-hop album to be released from 2000-2009. I honestly, don't even really know where to start here. How Common isn't universally hailed as a top 10 MC dead or alive is completely baffling to me and Like Water for Chocolate shows why he deserves that spot better than any of his other albums, which is impressive, considering he has arguably the best discography in hip-hop. Within this one album, Com shows that he can story tell with the best of em, has the ability to use all the multi's and internal rhymes that all you technical rap fans out there love so much, as well as put more soul and emotion into his tracks than pretty much anybody else in the game. Not to mention, some of these tracks are damn catchy. He even managed to pull off that rare feat of having an actually funny skit in a rap album (with MC Lyte's help). Besides Common's overall flawlessness on here, J. Dilla and ?uestlove did a fantastic job producing a well constructed, cohesive album. Only one track stands out as not really fitting the mold, but considering it's my favorite track DJ Premier has ever produced, I'm willing to let is slide. The most common criticism I hear about this album is that it is boring. Seriously, if you find this album boring, you're not actually listening.<br />
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Feel free to gripe at me in the comment section if you disagree with any of my choices for this list, or any of my commentaries on the albums. If you want to rain praises on me, I guess that's alright, too. Got an album or two that you think deserved a spot, but didn't get mentioned? Let me know, there are far, far more than 50 great albums from this era, and I'm not going to try and act like I've heard all of them. Hopefully, I helped some of you find some good albums that you hadn't heard before.<br />
Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-67875782815587681312013-03-16T02:01:00.001-05:002013-03-16T02:01:46.375-05:00Top 50 Albums of the 2000's: Albums That Didn't Quite Make It<br />
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Before I reveal the top 10, I'd like to acknowledge some of the other great albums from this era, that could have very easily found a spot in the top 50, but fell just short and why I elected not to include them. (These aren't in any particular order)<br />
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Take Me to Your Leader - King Gheedora (2003) / Vaudeville Villain - Viktor Vaughn (2003)<br />
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Both of these are MF DOOM alter-egos and honestly, the biggest thing holding both of them back was that I already had several DOOM projects on the list. These two got left off, as opposed to The Mouse and Mask or MM..Food mostly due to production. This is especially true for Villain.<br />
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The Hunt For the Gingerbread Man (2007) / Scars & Memories (2005) / The Downfall of Ibylis: A Ghetto Opera (2002) - MF Grimm<br />
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All of these were on the list in earlier drafts at different points, and they all ended up off mostly because of my inability to choose between them. Gingerbread Man has one of my favorite concepts ever, and Scars & Memories is one of the most personal albums you'll ever hear.<br />
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You Can't Imagine How Much Fun We're Having - Atmosphere (2006) / Movies for the Blind - Cage (2002)<br />
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These fell off as a result of having another album by their respective artists appearing in the 40-50 range. Rather than clog up the bottom of the list with multiple albums from the same rappers, I decided to give a bit more variety. AKA, me trying to please everybody.<br />
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Desire - Pharoahe Monch (2007)<br />
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I'll be honest, I just forgot this one until I was already well into posting the final list. I deserves a spot (probably in the mid-late 30's) and I feel bad for leaving it off.<br />
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The Lost Tapes - Nas (2002)<br />
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This is my favorite Nas release aside from Illmatic, but the fact that it's tracks that got left on the floor from his old (pre-00's) albums and the fact that it's not actually an album kept me from putting it on the list. It would have definitely gotten a top 10 spot, had I included it.<br />
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Evolution Fight - CYNE (2005)<br />
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This album is a personal favorite of mine and was one of the last ones cut from the final draft. The rapping is not outstanding and the production can't quite cover enough ground to make the top 50 push (like it did for Fantastic Vol 2). This was also a casualty of me trying to bring a bit more variety to the list, other than having it be all soft, alternative type stuff.<br />
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Fantastic Damage - El-P (2002)<br />
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This was on several early drafts of the list, but ultimately got left off because, at the time I was making the final draft, I hadn't heard it in ages and didn't have it on my iPod anymore, so I didn't feel comfortable ranking it. Def Jux got plenty of representation on the final list, regardless.<br />
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Accepted Eclectic - Aceyalone (2001)<br />
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Had this been a bit more cohesive album, it might have made the top 20 on the back of Acey's technical abilites. Acey's rhymes are on point, but it feels more like just a collection of songs than an actual album. The production is pretty uninteresting, too.<br />
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Demon Days - Gorillaz (2005) / Gorillaz - Gorillaz (2001)<br />
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It probably would have been Demon Dayz that I included, had I decided to include a Gorillaz album. They're both great albums, but kind of fall in the gray area between hip-hop and rock, so I didn't feel it would be appropriate to include them on a list of hip-hop albums.<br />
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Stankonia - OutKast (2000)<br />
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It has a few all time great hip-hop tracks, but it's too marred in inconsistency. A lot of this album feels like filler, unfortunate considering it's 23 tracks. If this had been cut down to like 15 tracks, it would have definitely had a place on the list. Probably a top 20 place.<br />
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Typical Cats - Typical Cats (2001)<br />
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Qwel is a guy that could have had several albums appear in the 35-50 range. The first Typical Cats album is my personal favorite project he's been a part of. Bland production held it off the final list, but Qwel goes HAM on this and puts on a clinic for punchline rappers.<br />
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There are plenty more that could have made the final list (I almost just decided to make it a top 100, instead), but those are a few that were cut within the last couple drafts of the final list, just to give you all a little insight into my thought process while I was compiling this. All of them are great albums, despite my criticisms and are definitely worth a spin or two if you haven't heard them.<br />
Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-9193468347423553262013-03-13T20:19:00.002-05:002013-03-13T20:19:36.709-05:00Top 50 Hip-Hop Albums of the 2000's #11-20<br />
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#20 Food & Liquor - Lupe Fiasco (2006)<br />
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Lupe's debut was more anticipated than any in recent memory, he was supposed to be hip-hop's savior, the guy that finally crossed technical ability with widespread appeal. He never really lived up to the hype, but he came damn close here. He's witty, clever and hungry on this album and he's clearly aware of the hype that was surrounding him. Excruciatingly bland hooks kept this album from being as successful as it could have been.<br />
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#19 Below the Heavens - Blu and Exile (2007)<br />
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Blu and Exile are a perfect example of two artists that know how to bring out the best in each other. Exile's beats serve as a perfect backdrop to Blu's intensely personal rhymes and Blu's delivery in no way is overbearing, which allows Exile's beats to shine. As such, it's an album that functions well for both easy listening and holds up just as well to the more scrutinizing ear.<br />
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#18 The Listening - Little Brother (2003)<br />
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9th Wonder in his prime was one of the best producers in hip-hop. He can chop soul samples with the best of them and has a great ear for drums. The production really makes this album, but Phonte and Big Pooh aren't slouches either. They're not going to revolutionize the rap game by any means, but they both bring wit and fun to the table, which is more than you can say for a lot of MCs.<br />
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#17 Disposable Arts - Masta Ace (2001)<br />
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This was Masta Ace's comeback album after a fairly long hiatus and it's absolutely dripping with frustration for the direction hip-hop had gone since his last release. This is a double edged sword. Ace sounds more inspired on this record than in any of his previous efforts, but at the same time, he tends to harp on that one topic too much, and it takes away from the concept this album was supposed to have. Regardless of how well he adhered to his concept, Ace's rhymes were on point cover to cover and the beats are serviceable.<br />
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#16 Phrenology - The Roots (2002)<br />
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This album catches a little flack for trying to pander too hard to a broader fan base because of the stark variety in the sound of a lot of the tracks. I can't really argue with that; it's an album lacking cohesion, for sure. Instead of looking at it as pandering to the masses, I prefer to look at it as The Roots simply showing off their diversity. Black Thought gets plenty of opportunity to shine, but really it's the band's album. They got to show off their skills in a way that they hadn't in any of the Root's previous releases and the result is a mish-mash of rock, hip-hop and neo-soul.<br />
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#15 Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... Pt 2 - Raekwon (2009)<br />
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Is it as good as the original? No, but sequels rarely are, and that doesn't stop it from being Raekwon's second best album by a wide margin. It picks up right where Rae and Papa Wu left off in the original. If someone were to tell me that this is the best Wu album since the first Only Built 4 Cuban Linx, I wouldn't put up much of an argument. It's truly a great throwback to their mid-90s glory years. Could've used more Ghost, though. Although, really, what album couldn't use more Ghost?<br />
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#14 Late Registration - Kanye West (2005)<br />
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Kanye did exactly what needs to be done in a sophomore followup to a successful debut; take what worked and build upon it. The production is more grandiose, the features are bigger, the themes are similar. Really, the only thing that holds it from surpassing it's predecessor (foreshadowing!?!?!) is Kanye's ego. He's not nearly as likable and relateable as he was on his debut.<br />
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#13 Stillmatic - Nas (2001)<br />
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For whatever reason, Jay-Z felt in necessary to call out Nas on The Blueprint. By doing so, he put the spotlight back onto Nas, who's career was all but over. Nas responded by releasing Stillmatic. The Jay-Z diss tracks are what made this album notable to the general populace, but getting past Ether this is actually a great return to form for Nas. He finally got past trying to clone Illmatic (despite what the title would lead you to believe) and reinvented his sound for the new millenium. The production is lacking at times, but lyrically it's one of Nas' best.<br />
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#12 Donuts - J. Dilla (2006)<br />
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By 2006, it was widely known that J. Dilla was severely ill. Almost all of Donuts was recorded from a hospital bed and it was released just 3 days before his death. It's gone on to be considered the preeminant instrumental hip-hop album. Dilla's use of vocal samples here is what really makes this album stand out among other instrumentals. It's an album that I like a little more every time I hear it. The first listen feels erratic and messy, but the tenth you come to appreciate the variety and Dilla's ability to leave an impact with such short tracks.<br />
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#11 Masters of the Universe - Binary Star (2000)<br />
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Everything I said about One Be Lo's solo album, S.O.N.O.G.R.A.M. still applies here. The difference is now there are two MC's. That's what makes this album great, the way Be Lo and Senim Silla play off of each other; their styles are so comparable and their voices are so similar that at times it is hard to tell which of them is rapping. They're perfectly symbiotic with one another in a way that you won't find in any other group.<br />
Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-16162992054061546012013-03-12T03:39:00.002-05:002013-03-12T03:39:51.244-05:00Top 50 Albums of the 2000's #21-30<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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#30 The Ecstatic - Mos Def (2009)<br />
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Mos manged to find time in his busy acting schedule to throw together one of the best albums of 2009. After a couple of releases that were just OK, Mos get's back to his roots a little bit here and the result was a very solid effort. Note Mos, you're not THAT good of a singer, more rapping = more success for you.<br />
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#29 Quality - Talib Kweli (2002)<br />
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One of the albums that most exemplified what the Soulquarians were all about in the late 90's and early 00's. It's emotionally honest, spiritually driven and smooth. Kweli seems to legitimately think he has the ability to change the world with his music. It's one of my favorite albums from a production standpoint, as well. Pre-superstar status Kanye, in particular does a great job.<br />
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#28 The Blueprint - Jay-Z (2001)<br />
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Speaking of pre-superstar Kanye, I really hope Jay-Z calls him every day and thanks him for saving his career and Kanye in turn thanks Jay for giving him a career. Coming off of the disastrous failure that was The Dynasty, Jay needed to deliver on his subsequent album. He responded by bringing in Kanye and Just Blaze, who were nobodies at the time, but are now probably two of the top 5 most popular in the game. Jay-Z sticks to his standard fare for the most part, namely how awesome and rich he is. Honestly, he get's outshone by the production, but he's not bad by any means. Oh, and Jay didn't like Nas very much in 2001, either.<br />
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#27 The Fix - Scarface (2002)<br />
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I swear, I didn't mean for there to be this much early Kanye production in this portion, it just happened. If this album had just stopped after the first 8 tracks, it would probably be in the top 10. The Neptunes seem to have an uncanny ability to show up where they aren't needed, though and that's where I usually turn off this album. Somehow, or another, Scarface managed to get Nas and Jay-Z to appear on the same album in 2002, with Nas delivering arguably the best verse on the album. Scarface is the progenitor of drug game rapping, he shows here that he's still one of the best at it. (or at least he was in 2002)<br />
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#26 Fishscale - Ghostface Killah (2006)<br />
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With albums like this, I don't understand why Ghostface isn't universally considered one of, if not the best storyteller in hip-hop. He gives some of the most vivid, graphic descriptions of the world around him that you will ever hear. I don't think I would call this a concept album per se, so much as a themed album. Surprise! The theme is cocaine... Who didn't see that coming?<br />
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#25 The Best Part - J-Live (2001)<br />
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If this album had been released when it was supposed to have been (1997), J-Live would probably be one of the most universally respected MCs around. Unfortunately, record label problems kept delaying the release further and further, eventually culminating in an independent release, with little fanfare, 5 years past its time. J-Live muses for well over an hour on what it means to be an MC and the impact hip-hop has on communities. He shows diverse flow and brilliant lyrics, throughout. J-Live is truly one of the more tragic stories in hip-hop.<br />
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#24 S.O.N.O.G.R.A.M. - One Be Lo (2005)<br />
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If someone were to ask me to suggest them one album that exemplifies underground hip-hop, S.O.N.O.G.R.A.M. might be the one I'd choose. Lo-Fi production throughout with plenty of crate digging, tracks about doing hip-hop just for the sake of hip-hop, tracks about the shallowness of the record industry and a healthy portion of philosophy thrown in for good measure, I can't think of a more prototypical underground album.<br />
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#23 The Marshal Mathers LP - Eminem (2000)<br />
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This is without a doubt, the most ubiquitous album that I can remember, any genre. You literally couldn't not hear this album 2000, my grandma has probably heard this album in it's entirety. That alone makes this the most important hip-hop album of the past 20 years, bar none. It turned hip-hop into something that wasn't just a "black thing," brought it into the suburbs. Being as popular as it was, it's kind of surprising how good of an album it actually is. Maybe I'm just cynical, but I don't expect an album that sells 15 million copies to be as witty and emotional as MMLP is. The controversy that came with that openness only managed to fuel the sales.<br />
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#22 Train of Thought - Reflection Eternal (2000)<br />
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Talib Kweli created one of the greatest masterpieces of lyricism in hip-hop history in 2000, and he knew it. If he wasn't so preachy and cocky about it, this could be a lot higher. Hi-Tek brings out plenty of deep basslines for Kweli to riff over and gives the whole record a very Neosoul-esque sound. Again, very Soulquarians standard.<br />
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#21 Fantastic Vol. 2 - Slum Village (2000)<br />
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This album is remembered for J. Dilla's production almost exclusively, with good reason. Dilla's beats are unquestionably fantastic here. However, I feel the rapping is under-appreciated because the beats are so good. Slum Village's MCs have an unwarranted reputation for being poor lyricists. Granted, they're not Talib Kweli, by any means but, as a group they play off each other very well and do a great job letting the beats set the tone. Nobody wouldn't have been overshadowed by Dilla on this album, the MCs of Slum Village simply know their role and perform it admirably.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-31194677563621578012013-03-09T21:01:00.001-06:002013-03-09T21:02:48.960-06:00Top 50 Albums of the 2000's #31-40<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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#40 The Cool - Lupe Fiasco (2007)<br />
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Supposedly there's a concept in here somewhere. Unfortunately, nobody but Lupe has ever been able to find/explain it. It is a great collection of tracks, but probably would have been better served without the heaping serving of crazy. That's Lupe though, it's part of what makes him interesting.<br />
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#39 The Preface - Elzhi (2008)<br />
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Not sure how El rationalized calling this "The Preface" when he'd already been around for over 10 years at the time. It's a slightly deeper look at Elzhi than what we got to here in his Slum Village days, though. That's not to say there aren't still plenty of playful gimmick tracks.<br />
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#38 The Black Album - Jay-Z (2003)<br />
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This marks the first time Jay-Z pulled the "this is my last album" card in order to generate hype for an album. He pulled in an all-star cast of producers. Really, this is the album that started the whole Jay-Z: great or greatest debate.<br />
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#37 MM..Food - MF DOOM (2004)<br />
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2003-2005 was the golden age of DOOM. In two years, he managed to put out more good albums than all but the very best in hip-hop have in their whole careers. Typical of DOOM, it's got plenty of low-brow humor and clever wordplay. This album would be a lot higher if it weren't for the 7 straight minutes of sound collage in the middle of it.<br />
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#36 The Renaissance - Q-Tip (2008)<br />
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What this album really has going for it is that it comes from an older MC, but he's not harping about how hip-hop has changed for the worse since he started. This is an album that feels like an actual, logical progression for Q-Tip after his A Tribe Called Quest days, picking up right where The Love Movement left off. It would have been really easy for him to gripe about why hip-hop sucks now, as so many of the 80s and 90s veterans have. If I were to describe it in one word, it'd be "warm."<br />
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#35 A Long Hot Summer - Masta Ace (2004)<br />
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...and on the opposite end of the spectrum, is Masta Ace, who spends half an album condemning the rap industry. Getting past that, this is a refreshingly mature look at urban life. Masta Ace comes off as somebody who has been around the block more than a few times and is content now just to sit on his stoop and watch what's going on around him.<br />
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#34 I-Phantom - Mr Lif (2002)<br />
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Mr Lif delivers a concept album that I think a lot of people will be able to relate to here. Not so much the part about getting killed and being resurrected (Jesus?), but the overarching theme of the precarious balance between striving for success and maintaining your identity.<br />
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#33 God's Son - Nas (2002)<br />
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If Nas had scrounged together some decent beats, this album would be easily in the top 10, unfortunately, that wasn't the case. Being a legend and all, Nas still managed to give us one of the most deeply emotional albums that you'll ever hear in hip-hop. His mother had just died and it had recently come out that his baby mama had an affair with his biggest rival (Jay-Z). It's easy to see where all this self examination stems from.<br />
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#32 Nia - Blackalicious (2000)<br />
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Blackalicious ushered in the new decade with this jazzy, soulful contribution. Gift of Gab shows why he's considered one of the most versatile MCs in the game. He puts on a veritable clinic on how to switch up your flow to suit a beat.<br />
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#31 The Unseen - Quasimoto (2000)<br />
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There has never been a more ringing endorsement for chronic drug use than Madlib. He's been one of the sharpest, most interesting producers in hip-hop for over 10 years and he credits it to massive consumption of shrooms and chain-smoking of blunts. Quasimoto is Madlib's alter-ego, a yellow, anthropoid hippo thing; never seen without a brick in one hand and joint in the other. The Unseen is Madlib at his best, the samples are obscure, the chopping is unorthodox and the transitions are weird. Quas' lyrics are delivered in the most indifferent, lazy tone imaginable, almost to the point of just sounding like someone just recorded him rambling and put a beat behind it. There is nothing even close to orthodox going on here, but somehow or another, it works.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-64294962741362085012013-03-08T21:13:00.000-06:002013-03-08T21:13:10.050-06:00Top 50 Albums of the 2000's #41-50<br />
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#50 In the Ruff - Diamond District (2009)<br />
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I personally have never heard this album, but LuxDel came groveling for me to include it, so here you go. I tell ya, girl’s got no shame…<br />
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#49 Bayani – Blue Scholars (2007)<br />
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Emotionally and politically charged, this is Blue Scholars at the top of their game. Geo’s delivery might rub some people the wrong way, but I honestly can’t see anyone else delivering his lyrics in a more fitting manner.<br />
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#48 Hell’s Winter – Cage (2005)<br />
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Disturbing, distressing and all around depressing. It’s a much deeper and more interesting look at Cage than any of his other efforts have provided. El-P and Camu Tao did a hell of a job on the production, too.<br />
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#47 Labor Days – Aesop Rock (2001)<br />
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It’s abstract, it’s confusing, it’s Aesop Rock at his finest. Somewhere in this mess is a concept album about working class people. Finding it is the fun part.<br />
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#46 Both Sides of the Brain – Del tha Funkee Homosapien (2000)<br />
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After disappearing for almost 5 years, Del came back with a vengeance in 2000. He’s never been more of a cynical wise-ass than he is here.<br />
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#45 God Loves Ugly – Atmosphere (2002)<br />
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This album is about as bitter and angry as hip-hop gets. It may not be as fun of a listen as subsequent Atmosphere albums, but I’m a sucker for emotion, and this album is oozing with it.<br />
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#44 Pick a Bigger Weapon – The Coup (2006)<br />
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The Coup have been the quintessential political hip-hop act for years and with albums like this, it’s easy to see why. This album has all the system hatred you could ever want. Of course, it wouldn’t be The Coup without a funky bass line or two, too.<br />
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#43 The Eminem Show – Eminem (2002)<br />
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Oh, Eminem, what happened to you? You used to be so raw and edgy. This is an album born of controversy, and Em spills it all on how he feels about his role in hip-hop and culture.<br />
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#42 A Piece of Strange – Cunninlyguists (2006)<br />
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Despite arguably the least clever name in hip-hop, Cunninlyguists managed to put out a string of pretty solid albums in the 00′s. Kno is at his best here on beats. He even manages to make Immortal Technique sound alright.<br />
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#41 The Mouse and the Mask – DangerDOOM (2005)<br />
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A collaboration between MF DOOM, Danger Mouse and a block of late night comedy cartoons somehow manged to end up as one of the best albums of the decade. It’s stupid and juvenile, but it’s also fun; and in the end, isn’t that the point of making music?<br />
Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-61473564145012293142013-03-06T20:44:00.000-06:002013-03-06T20:44:05.689-06:00Nas - Life is Good (2012)<br />
Nas is the best example I can think of of how having a great debut album can both make and ruin a career. Nas’ debut, Illmatic, is not only his crowning achievement, but arguably the greatest hip-hop album ever recorded. That’s something to put on a résumé; there aren’t many who can claim such an achievement. However, having such a highly regarded album in his discography has, unfortunately, meant that many of his subsequent albums have been widely considered disappointments at the time of release, regardless of quality. His second album, It Was Written, for example, received very mixed reviews, but is commonly regarded as a classic now. His 2001 album, Stillmatic, was similarly maligned by critics during its time, but has since been embraced as a classic. More recently, Nas seems to have escaped from Illmatic’s shadow, somewhat. Whether it be due to Nas’ greater consistency on the mic, or a growing population of listeners looking to hear and rain praises upon any and all things “non-commercial,” Nas’ more recent efforts have been largely well received. That includes Grammy nominations for both Hip-Hop is Dead and Untitled. I wasn’t surprised to see Life is Good be released to similar accolades. That being said, Life is Good is better than anything Nas has released since God’s Son in 2002.<br />
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Any Nas album is going to begin and end with the vocals. Nas is almost universally considered to be a top 5 MC of all time. One Nas’ biggest struggles, however has been finding topics that he really seems to care enough about to write passionate verses. He has historically been his best when facing some sort of adversity in his life or career. Illmatic was his debut, It Was Written had him facing the prospect of following up such a widely acclaimed album as Illmatic, Stillmatic was motivated by his feud with Jay-Z and God’s Son was motivated by the death of his mother. Since God’s Son, Nas has been dabbling in politically motivated tracks, mafioso type stuff and, of course, a fair amount (like an entire album’s worth) of tracks about the good ole days of hip-hop. Frankly, most of it sounded kind of half-hearted. As I said above, Life is Good is Nas’ best release since God’s Son, so what is motivating Nas this time, around? A few things, it turns out. The most prominent one is his extremely messy, not to mention extremely public divorce from singer, Kelis (of “Milkshake” fame). He pays homage to this on the album cover, which features Nas sitting with a dress that is unmistakably similar to Kelis’ wedding dress. One of the standout tracks of the album, “Daughters” has Nas musing about the responsibilities of fatherhood and how his celebrity status has effected his ability to be a father. It comes in the wake of another public incident in Nas’ life, in which his 17 year old daughter posted a picture on Twitter of her condom-filled jewelry box that she keeps on her nightstand. For those of you who aren’t interested in hearing about Nas’ lady troubles, rest assured, there is plenty more here to keep you interested. This is still Nas, so of course he can’t resist staying completely away from talking about the past. He appropriately dedicates “Loco-Motive,” a track that sounds like it was ripped straight out of 1996, to his “trapped in the 90′s niggas.”<br />
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In a refreshing change of pace for Nas, Life is Good happens to feature actually interesting production, compliments of No I.D. and Salaam Remi. I might go so far as to say these are the best beats we’ve heard Nas over since Illmatic if it weren’t for the few inexplicable missteps. ”Reach Out,” while featuring Nas at his best, treads dangerously close to 80′s boy band territory. ”Summer On Smash” is kind of catchy, but dedicates far too much time to hooks, leaving us with probably a minute worth of verses in an over 4 minute song. ”You Wouldn’t Understand” sounds like a pop track that got released 20 years too late. Those missteps are easily overshadowed by a cornucopia of interesting, if not necessarily innovative beats. ”Accident Murderers” makes better use of the organ than any track I’ve heard since “Pigeon” off of Cannibal Ox’s The Cold Vein. ”Loco-Motive,” “Cherry Wine,” and “Nasty” all stand out as having better beats than almost anything we’ve heard Nas over lately, as well.<br />
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I can’t see Life is Good ever being considered to be in the same echelon as Illmatic, or even Stillmatic and It Was Written, but that’s not to say it isn’t still a very good album, deserving of all the acclaim it has gotten. It’s definitely an album of the year candidate. The only real flaw is that it tries too hard at times to pander to mainstream listeners. Tracks like “Summer On Smash” not only don’t live up to the high standards that I’ve come to hold Nas to, but seem out of place in the album as a whole, somewhat derailing the ambiance that tracks leading up to it establish. Not to harp on “Summer On Smash” in particular, but it’s presence is all the more baffling due to it not being released as a single. I could understand if it was just a track made to get radio play, but that’s not the case. In the long run, people tend to forget about such tracks though, this is going to be remembered as an album borne of heartache and adversity. It’s unfortunate for Nas that he seems to need that in order to produce good music. Whether coming out with a good album is worth everything that has happened to him over the last couple years is something only he can decide. At least he’ll probably get another Grammy nomination.<br />
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Best Tracks: No Introduction, Loco-Motive, Accident Murderers, Cherry Wine, Nasty (iTunes bonus track)<br />
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Overall: 87/100<br />
Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-16248972645529777032013-03-06T10:04:00.001-06:002013-03-06T10:04:26.007-06:00Danny Brown - XXX (2011)<br />
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There probably wasn’t an album or mixtape to come out in 2011 that was as polarizing as XXX by Danny Brown. Between Danny’s yelping bleat of a voice, abrasive content and… unusual style, there is plenty here for traditional hip-hop fans to hate. Whether you like it or not, though, Danny Brown is going to make you experience his world.<br />
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Danny steals the show on this album, but the production shouldn’t be underestimated, either. The beats were handled by a mish-mash of relatively unknown young producers and they provide a great backdrop for Danny’s tales of drug and excess. SKYWLKR’s beats, specifically, really bring out the best in Danny. The grimy electronic samples on tracks like “Bruiser Brigade” immediately remind the listener of drug fueled depravity in a poorly lit, trashy club. There is enough variety in the production to give XXX a lot of replay value, as well. Featuring electronic samples, as well as brass, pianos and the traditional drum machines, pretty much everybody is going to be able to find at least a beat or two that they really like.<br />
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While the beats are interesting and do a great job setting the tone of the album, Danny himself is what makes XXX. From the first track, we’re introduced to the concept as well as our anti-hero protagonist. It’s a (hopefully) dramatized version of Danny himself. He’s a melting pot of anger, depression, debauchery, and insanity. He’s on the brink of successful music career and the pressure to succeed has pushed him consume any kind of mind altering substance he can get his hands on. Tracks like “Die Like a Rockstar” show that he’s fully aware that his lifestyle is destructive, but establish that he really doesn’t care. Danny spends the majority of the album riding the line between hardcore gangsta and sketchy crackhead, using pitching changes to tilt his persona one way or another as he sees fit. As the album progresses, he tones down the sexual explicitness and sheds his persona that he establishes for the first 12 tracks and we’re introduced to a little bit deeper look at Danny’s life. ”DNA” and “Scrap or Die” tell of the hardships he went through before his rap career, from having drug-addicted parents to living in poverty and stealing to survive. He shows a maturity at the end of the album that isn’t there in the beginning. It almost sounds like a completely different album. It’s nice to have a little bit of change of pace, but the transition was too sudden and too drastic, in my opinion, especially for a concept that was working extremely well.<br />
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Overall, XXX is an album that you are either going to absolutely love or absolutely hate. Danny’s delivery and lyrics are extremely polarizing. If you take it too seriously, you’re going to be horrified by some of the explicitly violent or sexual (often both) things Danny says here. I think the reason for the sudden change in pace halfway through the album is to establish that he’s not really the person that he pretends to be for the first half, though. While I think the transition from part 1 to part 2 could have been done more smoothly, the shift was probably necessary. It puts a relate-able human face on Danny. It’s hard to sympathize with a character whose primary concerns are doing drugs caving girls’ faces in with his penis, but give him drug addicted parents and a rough upbringing and suddenly he’s less of a villain than a tragic, cautionary tale. XXX is going to be remembered for the persona Danny adopts in the first half, rather than the introspection we see in the second, though. He’s crude, he’s abrasive, he’s annoying, he’s just an overall awful person, and I loved it.<br />
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Best Tracks: XXX, Die Like a Rockstar, Monopoly, Blunt after Blunt, 30<br />
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Overall: 89/100<br />
Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-26451650532599447012013-03-04T20:14:00.001-06:002013-03-04T20:14:42.134-06:00Ta-Ku - 24 (2011)<br />
Perth, Australia based producer Ta-Ku had been on the outskirts of my radar for the past two years, steadily releasing quality beat tapes and instrumental EP’s, but never really making me sit up and notice him amongst the high influx of talented beat smiths flooding the internet in the last decade. Perhaps best known for his J Dilla Tribute series, I didn't get hooked on his work until I listened to his beat tape ’24′, just over a month ago. Yes, I'm late.<br />
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Like many beat tapes, 24 is a collaboration project. The idea came from Ta-Ku’s friendship with Soulection co-founder Joe Kay, and the premise was simple. Create one beat, fit to be aired on Soulection Radio, in 24 hours. What came from the experiment was 13 crazy dope beats created by Ta-Ku over 13 days.<br />
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The idea was bold and challenging. At risk of churning out half-assed beats to stay within the timeframe, Ta-Ku instead created 13 beautifully polished tracks, with each beat displaying Ta-Ku’s ability to make a robust sound without sacrificing for the sake of timeliness. The intricacies on tracks like Hard to Imagine and 1, 2, 3, 4 make it hard to believe they were signed, sealed and delivered in 24 hours. I don’t know the first thing about producing, but I’ve heard enough beats to know that it’s a time-intensive art and incredibly hard to select cohesive sounds and blend them together without it sounding like sonic pollution. So for a producer to undertake a challenge like 24, and have each and every beat come out sounding so put together and fresh, is surely a testament to Ta-Ku’s finesse with digital audio gear and mad time-management skills. Add to this his ear for choosing smooth samples and what you come away with is a sweet little beat tape with an impressive concept that would make even the most prolific producers sweat a little bit.<br />
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While there’s no throw away beats on here, there are one or two tracks that make you think he was having an uninspired day. The track ’Another Day’ comes off feeling dull and bland. One thinks the title was chosen in exasperation. ‘I Love You’ lacks any heart and veers on annoying, with the looped vocal grating on the nerves. Lastly, the ‘Donut Interlude’ with its obvious Dilla salute lacks any type of charm or beauty it should have had with its link to one of the greatest to ever touch an MPC.<br />
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Last Word: The entire concept of creating one beat a day for 13 consecutive days, and have most of the beats come out so well-executed, truly showcases Ta-Ku’s skills and cements him in the group of newer beat smiths to watch out for. Oh and it’s completely free!<br />
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Overall: 82/100<br />
Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-36969509978421973662013-03-04T11:53:00.001-06:002013-03-04T11:53:46.929-06:00Gift of Gab - The Next Logical Progression (2012)<br />
Blackalicious MC, Gift of Gab has been a mainstay of the West Coast underground scene for almost twenty years now, and even though Blackalicious hasn’t put out a release since 2005, Gab has managed to keep himself busy with a string of impressive solo albums. The latest in that line is 2012′s The Next Logical Progression. Although, most probably won’t consider it his best effort, Gab puts together a very respectable collection of tracks and once again shows why he’s one of the most highly respected MCs in the game.<br />
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Gab comes out of the gate guns blazing, using the first track as a sort of pre-introduction, just to make sure the listener remembers that he has inhuman breath control and lyrics for days. Unfortunately, we also have to chalk Gift of Gab up as another in the long line of older MCs who take exception to the current state of hip-hop. It’s become a go-to topic over the past few years; frankly it’s getting a little tiring. Let’s be honest; if you’re listening to a Gift of Gab solo album, you probably aren’t a big fan of mainstream hip-hop to begin with, there’s no need to harp on the topic anymore. In general, The Next Logical Progression is a very positive album, filled with feel good choruses and inspirational lyrics. The running theme of the album is a general appreciation of life. Although, the story didn’t break until well after recording for this album was done, Gab has had some pretty substantial health problems as of late (he’s currently awaiting a kidney transplant and has suffered from Type 1 diabetes for years), and they’ve clearly given him a new perspective on life. Some of the narrative tracks border on corny, in “Effed Up,” for example, in a twist that nobody won’t see coming, the girl who scorned him gets her comeuppance when Gab sees her penniless on the street. (spoiler alert?)<br />
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Fellow Oaklander, G-Koop handled the production on The Next Logical Progression, and he took it in a different direction than Gab’s previous albums. The spacey effects are gone as are many of the soul samples. Unlike 4th Dimensional Rocketships and Escape 2 Mars, The Next Logical Progression is more thematic than conceptual, as such, the beats had to return to Earth, so to speak. While not particularly intricate, the beats are extremely catchy and could go a long ways towards extending Gab’s fan base. Most of the beats feature live instrumentals, which is always refreshing in hip-hop. There might be more piano looping than I’ve heard in a hip-hop album. Supposedly, Gab came up with many of the beats himself; humming bass lines into a tape recorder and giving them to Koop to turn into recordable beats. Overall, the productions fits the theme of the album very well. None of the beats are ever going to be remembered as classics, but they provide a suitable backdrop for Gab’s rhymes. Nobody listens to a Gift of Gab project for the production, anyway.<br />
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I know, it sounds like I’m being really heavy with my criticisms of The Next Logical Progression, but that’s because I’m comparing it to one of the best bodies of work in hip-hop. This is, in all reality, a very good album that is definitely worth at least a spin or two. If someone were to call Gift of Gab the most technically skilled rapper ever, I wouldn’t argue with them, and those skills are on full display here. Ultimately, The Next Logical Progression will go down as an album that, while technically outstanding, was thematically flawed. It was certainly a step in a new direction for Gift of Gab, but I wouldn’t exactly call it a progression.<br />
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Best Tracks: NLP, Rise, Protocol, Toxic, Market & 8th<br />
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Overall: 85/100<br />
Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-994178290756704962013-03-04T11:47:00.001-06:002013-03-04T11:49:41.633-06:00Del the Funky Homosapien & Parallel Thought - Attractive Sin (2012)<br />
My my, Del has been busy these last few years. If he manages to put out all the releases he has scheduled for 2012, he will have put out seventeen releases in four years. To put that in perspective, he only had ten releases in the first seventeen years of his career, most of which were group collaborations. Unfortunately, none of those seventeen (that have been released so far) have been more than just pretty good. His 2012 collaboration with production team Parallel Thought, Attractive Sin, fits into that category. It’s a pretty good album that, in all honesty, probably isn’t going to be remembered 5 years from now.<br />
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While it doesn’t exactly have the stiffest of competition, Attractive Sin features arguably the best production we’ve heard Del rap over since Full Circle as a member of Hieroglyphics in 2002. I’m always a fan of brass in hip-hop and this album features plenty of it. “Ownership” and “Different Guidelines,” specifically, feature very well executed, brass driven beats. As a whole the production is notably more jazz influenced than what we’re used to hearing on a Del album. Unfortunately, the beats border on monotonous by the end of the album. The album is organized so that it starts relatively upbeat and gets progressively less so as it progresses, leaving the listener waiting for a grand finale that just never comes. Ending the album with a catchy banger, or a particularly deep, moving song, or even just a song that really showed Del flexing his lyrical muscles a little bit would have done this album a world of good. Instead, it ends with a total throw away track in “Front Like You Know.” In an album all but devoid of choruses, organization is of the utmost importance, and I seems like Del and PT dropped the ball here. It’s an album that is just hard to pay attention to for the full duration.<br />
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Almost no choruses means we’re treated to 40 minutes of straight Del verses. He sounds very MF DOOM like here, spitting his verses with an endearing monotone laziness that is only enhanced by his signature drawl. He takes advantage of all this time dedicated to verses by… rapping about how awesome he is. Braggadocio has always been a staple of Del’s repertoire, but I can’t help but feel like he went a little overboard here. As impressive as it is to be able to come up with enough rhyming compliments of yourself to fill 40 minutes of time, the shtick wears a bit thin after a while. The stand out exception is “1520 Sedgwick.” Named for the most widely accepted “birthplace” of hip-hop, Del gives his opinion of what exactly is “hip-hop,” as well as a healthy dose of hating on the media and record industry (another staple subject of Del’s). Repetitive subject matter aside, I gotta say that Del is very impressive from a technical standpoint. Despite the beats being, at times, very complicated, he manages to ride them all perfectly while maintaining very complicated, almost haphazard sounding, rhyme schemes. That alone leaves me very optimistic for the upcoming Deltron 3030 sequel, Event II.<br />
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The biggest thing holding this album back from being truly good, or even great, is monotony. I was folding clothes the first time I listened to it (i.e. not giving it my full attention) and didn’t notice the tracks switch from “Activated Sludge” (the 5th track) until I realized that I had been listening to what I though was the same song for ages only to find that I was already at the 9th track, “Blow Your Mind.” This is a product of not only sameness in production staring in the middle of the album, but Del’s delivery. He doesn’t add any cadence to his voice for the entirety of the album, delivering every verse in the same monotone drone. Even Del sounds like he was bored with this by the end. This is a great album to listen to closely to once and then relegate to background music while working or doing chores (felt like that laundry I was folding just flew by).<br />
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Best Tracks: On Momma’s House, Ownership, 1520 Sedgewick, Blow Your Mind<br />
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Overall: 77/100Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-5967710312777826902013-03-03T13:54:00.000-06:002013-03-03T13:54:02.045-06:00Hus - Cognac Fruit (2011)<br />
No frills, no foreplay, Cognac Fruit starts on a remix and gets straight to the point, delivering ten songs in just under 27 minutes. You won’t get any shout outs, no drawn out intro/outro, no concept, no skits, no stems, no seeds. This is unadulterated rapping over ravaged soul beats, aimed at listeners who like their hip hop served neat.<br />
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Hus is one half of Tha Connection, a duo out of Hempstead, NY. Together with his partner SmooVth, they have released four true albums, each considered to be under appreciated 21st century gems. Their style borrows heavily from a 90’s sensibility but manages to stay fresh thanks to their inclination for choosing soulful, contemporary beats. If you want to get a feel for Hus’ origins then try Tha Connection albums Moon Water and Trapeze.<br />
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It’s a stripped down album to say the least. There are no legendary producers and certainly no big name guests, in fact there’s only one guest, Mok Vurban. Who? Exactly. This album is all Hus. It serves to showcase Hus’ solo skills and reminds one of what solo albums actually meant, back before it was normal to have a guest on each track. This is the common thread that runs throughout the whole album; it adheres to a 90’s mentality without stagnating in corny ‘I’m bringing the 90’s back yo!’ attitude. You could easily picture Hus spitting over a 90’s Premo beat but the lush production pulls the album back from being a played out history lesson and instead creates a modern environment for Hus’ gritty delivery. Yes, it’s got the boom bap drums but it’s layered with fluttering strings and jazzed out piano strokes instead of sampled loops and vocal scratching. The bones are ’97 but the substance is thoroughly here and now.<br />
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You want a rugged NY rapper you get one. If you want grand beats you get that too. You just won’t get much of it. With most songs clocking in at less than 3 minutes apiece, the shortness of the album is obvious. Add to that the fact that three of the ten tracks are remixes from previous Tha Connection albums, you might feel like you are listening to a fan made compilation. Short albums always have the safety of never growing tiresome but Cognac Fruit falters on the edge of being too sparse, you wonder why Hus was so thrifty, especially when you take into account that Tha Connection album Trapeze comes in with a staggering 27 songs. Capable of building a robust album with SmooVth, but chose the short ‘n’ sweet route on his solo, it’s a bit puzzling. What little we do get is incredible however and does make one excited for his future releases.<br />
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If you’re looking for a track list breakdown, you won’t find it on this review. Come on now. The album is only 27 minutes long. No hand holding here. Go listen to it and decide for yourself.<br />
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88/100<br />
Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-54754904712195450242013-03-02T20:30:00.001-06:002013-03-02T20:30:45.081-06:00Atomic Farmhouse - Fortune Cookie LP (2012)<br />
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One of the members of Atomic Farmhouse described this tape to me as “Nas’s Illmatic, Notorious B.I.G’s Ready To Die, and Wu Tang Clan’s Enter the 36 Chambers running a train on MF Doom’s Operation Doomsday.” I agreed to review this, assuming it would be another wack indie tape (I’ve had a few acts ask for reviews)and I’d be able to rip it to pieces as punishment for being so brash. Turns out, in a pleasant surprise, that wasn’t the case.<br />
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While it’s not going to shake the foundations of hip-hop, by any means, The Fortune Cookie LP is a couple levels above what you would expect from the debut (as far as I can tell) of an unknown indie act. The beats and general production is minimalistic, but serviceable. It never “wow’s” the listener, but aside from a few annoying effects here and there, makes listening an easy experience. I really enjoyed the use of vocal samples, such as at the end of “Rat Poison” and in “English Muffin.”<br />
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Braggadocio seems to be where the MCs of Atomic Farmhouse are most comfortable, specifically rubbing the fact that they have an LP in the faces of their doubters. The attempts at deeper subject matter feel somewhat lackluster. The lyrics don’t see a real drop off, but all of the MCs, other than MAD SYNTST, seem to have trouble flowing over the slower beats that tend to be associated with deeper songs. ANTI, who is easily the standout MC on the faster tracks, suddenly sounds very amateurish when put over a slow beat, such as on “Nyquil” or “English Muffin.”<br />
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All in all, The Fortune Cookie LP is definitely worth a spin. It’s a little rough around the edges at times, but it’s an independently released, debut LP, from what sounds to be a group of friends fresh out of high-school. They have all the time in the world to hone their skills and grow as a group. I think they have a lot of potential. They’re definitely a group to watch for in the future.<br />
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So, does it stand up to Illmatic, Ready to Die, 36 Chambers and Operation: DOOMsday? Of course not, but few do. Stylistically, it isn’t even really similar to any of them, either (more like a CYNE-Lupe Fiasco hybrid) Is it a respectable effort, regardless? Absolutely.<br />
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Also, the cover art is GOAT.<br />
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Best Tracks: Garage Sale, Dayquil, Public Massacre<br />
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Overall: 76/100<br />
Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-23201526492267693562013-03-02T13:19:00.000-06:002013-03-02T13:25:12.462-06:00Souls of Mischief - Montezuma's Revenge (2009)<br />
Is it just me, or do hip-hop acts seem exceptionally prone to the “sophomore slump?” That is, releasing a great first album, followed by a lackluster second album and loss of popularity. Oakland based group, Souls of Mischief, fell victim to this phenomenon arguably harder than anybody in the wake of their classic debut album 93 ’til Infinity (released in 1993, if you didn’t guess). Souls’ following three albums all met a lukewarm reception and the group went on a hiatus starting in 2000 and have been busying themselves with various solo efforts and side-projects ever since. For whatever reason, Souls decided to get back together for a fifth studio album, Montezuma’s Revenge in 2009, almost 10 years after their last group album and they even got Prince Paul (of De La Soul and Gravediggaz fame) to produce it for them.<br />
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Just listening to Montezuma’s Revenge, you would never guess that Souls of Mischief hadn’t all been on an album together since 2003 (Hieroglyphics’ Full Circle). Tracks like “Fourmation” have them trading verses as effortlessly as they ever have, really a testament to the chemistry these four MC’s have built up over their careers. Perhaps the most endearing part of the album, however, is that Souls make it plainly obvious that they aren’t shooting for mainstream success anymore. Starting from the first track, “Won,” the listener is assured that Souls is done with gimmicks and trying to appeal to critics. The “Mr. Freeman Skit” reaffirms that sentiment, while poking fun at a bunch of rappers who have all become completely irrelevant in the short time since this album was released. Maybe the whole idea of old-school rappers dissing awful current rappers has become cliche, but I still laugh at the “Mr. Freeman Skit”, even after having heard it several times.<br />
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I’ve yet to hear an album come out of the Hieroglyphics camp that didn’t have at least a song or two focusing on making sure everybody knows exactly how much cooler they are than everybody else, and Montezuma’s Revenge is no different. They do delve into some deeper subject matter, though, tackling issues such as relationships and what exactly makes something art.<br />
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Prince Paul fully delivers on the production of Montezuma’s Revenge, really touching on what had been missing from Souls’ previous few releases. Fun. Paul (like everybody else in the world) recognized that Souls aren’t well suited for dreary, gloomy beats and piercing social commentary. Their strength is, and probably always will be, battle style rapping; just a simple beat with a nice bass line with the emcees just trading verses back and forth. Don’t take that to mean that the production on Montezuma is simplistic. Honestly it’s probably more difficult for a producer, especially one of Prince Paul’s status, to be able to just lay off and let the emcees do what they do best. It’s not an album that’s going to be remembered for it’s groundbreaking beats by any means, but they’re beats perfectly suited for the emcees, and in my mind, that’s a way better than forcing excessive complexity in situations that don’t call for it.<br />
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You never know what you’re going to get when you get an album from a group that is almost 20 years past their peak fame. Montezuma’s Revenge isn’t an album that’s ever going to be looked at as a classic, but it is a very solid effort from a great group and a legendary producer. Aside from the lyrics being a little over-simplistic at times and a yawn inducing beat or two, Montezuma delivers everything a Souls of Mischief fan can could realistically hope for.<br />
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Best Tracks: Won, Tour Stories, Poets, Fourmation, For Real Y’all<br />
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Overall: 84/100Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-72253124471548606542013-03-01T16:02:00.000-06:002017-12-18T13:17:29.698-06:00Eminem - Recovery (2010)<br />
After a depressed and drug addicted Eminem released the lukewarm Encore in 2004, he went on hiatus for almost five years before returning with 2009′s Relapse. Once again, the reception was less than stellar. Recovery is Eminem’s attempt to put Encore and Relapse behind him and rekindle what it was that made him great from 1999-2002.<br />
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It’s hard for me to consider Recovery a successful album. It definitely sounds more like Em’s older releases than did Encore or Relapse, but it does so in many of the wrong ways. He doesn't seem to have updated his list of pop culture references since The Eminem Show, making references to Austin Powers and Mariah Carey (go figure). The primary theme of the album seems to be apologizing for his last couple releases.<br />
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To Em’s credit, the rapping on this album is actually very good from a technical standpoint. The rhyme schemes are extremely intricate. The problem is what he’s saying. All the cleverness and wit of his early releases is long gone; he doesn't even have shock value anymore. The whole album is painfully lacking in catchy, singalong, tracks. Unfortunately, most of the memorable lines are notable for being bad. It’s practically devoid of any hooks whatsoever. Eminem sings most of the ones that are present and… well, let’s just say that there is a reason Em doesn't have a singing career.<br />
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For an attempt to return to his 1999-2002 form, there was an incredible shortage of Dr. Dre and self produced tracks on Recovery. Dre ended up with only one credit, with Em himself not being the primary producer of a single track. Em’s Rolodex must’ve gotten a workout contacting all the producers on this album. Marquee producers, DJ Khalil and Just Blaze got the most production credits, with four and three, respectively. If you’re a fan of lots of soft rock samples in your hip-hop, the production on Recovery will be a treat for you. For the other 95% of us, listening to Recovery is a long 77 minutes of dreary keyboards and awkward samples that don’t fit together in any sort of cohesive manner.<br />
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Of course, as a hip-hop snob, I would be remissed if I failed to mention the presence of Lil Wayne, Pink and Rihanna on the album. How could any fan of 1999-2002 Eminem not feel at least a little betrayed by their presence? Em told us that he was going to try and return back to the sound that we all know and love, and instead we get him collaborating with exactly the kind of people that he built his career making fun of. That’s the definition of selling out; becoming what you would have once mocked.<br />
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Despite all my criticisms, Recovery is worth a spin or two. Yeah, it falls way short of what he wanted it to be, but there is reason to be optimistic about Eminem’s future. Unlike on Encore, Eminem shows that he is still a very technically skilled rapper. A few more quotable hooks would’ve really served this album well, if for no other reason than to distract from the occasional painfully bad lines that end up being the most memorable. Really, what brought this album down was the production, though. How, as a producer, you can not provide top shelf beats for an Eminem album is beyond me, but it just seemed like the beats were phoned in. Remember when Just Blaze used to be good?<br />
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Best Tracks: Talkin 2 Myself, Love the Way You Lie, Cinderella Man, Going Through Changes<br />
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Overall: 55/100Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6260376824923530299.post-85029284432578384532013-03-01T15:57:00.001-06:002013-03-01T15:57:55.742-06:00Kno - Death is Silent (2010)<br />
The concern with concept albums is whether the artist decides to take a literal or abstract approach. Death Is Silent’s concept adheres to the former. Intensely. It’s obvious from the mere title of the album that death and dying and all that depressing stuff will be the order. Whether Kno thinks little of his fan’s deciphering skills, or he himself is lacking the intelligence to compile an album that challenges the listener to discover the concept on their own, is definitely up for discussion.<br />
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Kno has a beautiful ability to construct a dope backdrop. His well-known use of obscure samples and talent with layering strings on synths on drums is unquestionable. But this is not an instrumental album. What could have been a near perfect collection of songs is let down by his straight up average presence on the mic and frown-inducing delivery.<br />
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He is vocally outdone on almost every track that has a guest. Examples of Kno being owned completely include Natti’s dominance on “If You Cry”, Nemo Achida’s incredible storytelling on “Loneliness” and Tonedeff’s stunning first verse effort on “I Wish I Was Dead”, easily a contender for verse of the album. Kno’s best verses comes from the tracks “They Told Me”, where he divulges his private anxieties in plain sight and “La Petite Mort (Come Die With Me)”, a cleverly veiled ode to sex that will take a few listens and perhaps some experience in the subject to unravel. It’s one thing to be a talented lyricist. Which he is. But his sappy and frail delivery wrecks the elegance of his lyrics.<br />
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Despite Kno’s tendency to say corny things, what makes this album an excellent addition to your music collection, is his capacity to create honest stories over magical beats. Atmospheric is a word that is more and more being incorrectly used to describe crowded production, but here it totally belongs. This has atmosphere in spades. The production is by far the standout element and it’s Kno who is solely responsible for it.<br />
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So do his cheesy verses get a pass because he is a ‘part-time’ MC? Well, no. He has shown some great propensity for spitting on the CunninLynguist albums. Maybe he was so caught up in the producing side of the album and neglected the vocal aspect? Perhaps. What’s obvious is if this was, say, a Tonedeff album, with the same concept and production, it would have been universally accepted as a top 3 album of 2010. It’s a frustrating album, so agonizing close to perfection but missing the most important part of any hip hop record; top notch MC skills.<br />
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Highs: Production on ALL tracks is amazing. The concept runs nicely throughout, and while it is a gloomy concept, it never feels unbearably heavy and tiresome; in fact, it’s a highly energetic album from start to finish.<br />
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Lows: Not enough Tonedeff.<br />
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87/100<br />
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