Showing posts with label hip. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hip. Show all posts

Monday, 22 August 2011

Slaine-A World With No Skies 2.0 Review

I must say that before this album I had never heard Slaine before. Which I suppose is a good thing, as therefore I had no biases against or for him while writing this review. Anyway, let’s get down to the actual album. After the controversy of A World With No Skies, the first version. Slaine decided to release a new album with the same name, and many of the same songs. So if you’ve heard A World With No Skies then there’s no point in getting 2.0. But if not, read on….
Black Horses: The beat is simple, yet it suits the atmosphere of the song. Lyrically it was very good. Overall it was a good start to the album. 8.5/10
Voices of Apocalypse: I really liked this beat. In fact I really liked this whole song. I think it was the hook the got me stuck to it. Anyway it may not have been the most lyrical song on the album, but there was something about it that attracted me to it. 9.5/10
99 Bottles: This beat made me of something that Grieves would rap over. The hook was a good play on the “99 bottles of beer on the wall” tune, but it was a bit corny. Yet the rest of song was lyrically good. 7.5/10
When I Shoot You: Another good beat. Yet again it had some good lyrics, but what was most notable about this track was that it was a very good story telling song. 8.5/10
Zombie (ft Son of Skam):  This was probably one of worst songs on the album. Son of Skam is probably the least lyrical person to feature on this album. Slaine doesn’t do badly but Son of Skam ruined it completely. He also tried to put in some rock and that didn’t work out at all. 6/10
Can’t Go Home: A huge improvement from the previous song. The beat is pretty simple but is really good. Slaine is once more lyrical and he does a good job on the hook. 8.5/10
You: The beat was ok, and the hook wasn’t great. In the end it was okay. Definitely not one of his best songs, even though he stays up at his usual standard lyrically. 7.5/10
Jumpin’ Out The Window (ft Cyrus Deshield & Edo G): This song was a top 4 of the album. The beat was simple but still good, I loved the hook, Slaine does what he does and Cyrus is good as well, as I thought he would be, being the most featured person on the album.9/10
Crazy (ft B Real & Jaysaun): An Immortal Technique sounding beat, with some good lyrics. This song actually sorta reminded me of Cyprus Hill (makes sense since B Real was on it). Although the chorus was corny. Jaysaun’s  verse wasn’t too bad, although I didn’t really like B Real’s. 7.5/10
I Ain’t Done: This beat had that “horror” sound to it, without overdoing it. This was another song that some people might look over, but I really liked it. And the hook,  was also enjoyable for me. And lyrics are also good. The effects that were put on the vocals I thought suited the song. And the outro of the song was good as well. 9/10
The Boulevard (ft Blacastan, Sean P. & Ill Bill): A pretty good beat, lyrics weren’t bad. The features all do well too. The song was good but nothing brilliant, it didn’t have anything standing out.  8/10
Broken (ft V Knuckles & Cyrus Deshield): A good beat. The hook was good to.  quite well but not nearly as well as Slaine, who is very good on this track, lyrically and flow-wise. 8.5/10
Ghosts: Another very good song, very good beat. Not much I can say about this track besides the fact that I liked it a lot. The hook was good, so were the lyrics, flow and concept. 9/10
Where My Heart Is (ft Cyrus Deshield):  I liked the hook. And Slaine didn’t disappoint once again. The singing was good too. 8.5/10
Borrowed Time (ft Checkmark & Lu Balz): So far this and 99 Bottles are the only 2 songs on the albums with music videos, so they will probably be the only singles for the album. Although I really liked the hook and lyrics on this song, I thought the beat wasn’t great. With the name Lu Balz, I expected him to suck, but he proved me wrong and did very well. With a different beat, this could have been a top 2 song of the album. 8.5/10
The Last Song (ft Everlast): The beat wasn’t  bad. And as almost every other song  on this album, it was good lyrically. Although I didn’t really like Everlast on the hook, and I would have much prefer him rapping on one of the verses than “singing” the hook. 8/10
Overall: 8.5/10
Certainly worth checking out (unless you’ve heard the first version of course). A very solid performance from Slaine, and if I was just rating him and not the beats or features, he would probably get 9.5/10. Go check it out and who knows, it might even make your top 10 albums of the year.
Music videos can be found here 99 bottles and Borrowed Time
By *Aboveground*

Sunday, 31 July 2011

Dr. Lecter-Action Bronson

I'll be the first to admit that I'm a little late to the Action Bronson bandwagon. In fact, the first time I heard him was on Legendary Weapons a couple weeks ago, and I have yet to check out his mixtape or other album. The review that follows is simply my thoughts on him from this album alone, free of external bias. Which is probably the right way to write a review anyway.
The first thing everybody says when Bronson's name is brought up is: Oh, he's that Ghostface biter. Which brings up the subtle question, What is the difference between biting and homage? Elzhi very clearly and deliberately changed his rhyme schemes to fit Nas's when he recorded Elmatic (play The Breakfast Club and Elmatic back to back if you don't believe me), but this wasn't seen as biting because the album was a deliberate homage. On the flip side, one of the largest arguments against Jay-Z's place as a great rapper is the allegations that he bit many lines from Biggie and others (Cam'ron's epic diss "Swagga Jacka" is a must-hear). These lines may be defended as homage, but the fact that Jay often just uses them without adding additional interpretation is troubling.
I'd place Action Bronson somewhere in the middle, equivalent to the place Eminem found himself in 1996, when critics accused him of sounding like AZ. On the one hand, Bronson's voice, flow, and rhyme scheme sound eerily like Ghost's; on the other, it's clear that, although he's flattered by the comparisons, these similarities are unintentional. Unlike both Elzhi or Sean Carter, he doesn't repeat lines; what he spits is fully of his own unique creation. In my humble opinion, the coincidence can only help him going forward; Ghostface's myriad fans may soon become Bronson's as well. Additionally, his voice and rhyme scheme are odd in comparison to most other rappers, so the fact that there's been an artist with the same stylings whose gained mainstream success might open the door for Bronson a little more. But enough with the hypotheticals; let's talk about the music.
The production on the title track 'Moonstruck' is handled by the previously-unknown Tommy as, who also produces the rest of the album, and it's very clear from the get-go that his stylings match Bronson's flow perfectly. A simple jazz-synth loop with one of my favorite hooks of the year manage to produce a sound that is grimy, dark, and just a little Wu (That may hurt the case against Ghostface comparisons, although the most Wu-esque album by a non-Wu member has to go to General Monks' Each Step Becomes Elevated). The rest of the album's beats are just as dope, and perhaps Mas's crowning achievement is that Bronson's voice is never overpowered nor overpowering; he keeps the beat interesting yet simple enough to highlight the emcee over it.
Bronson keeps up his end of the deal, too. On my first couple listens I didn't pay much, if any, attention to subject matter, but still found myself remarking over the number of food references. By talking about something close to home, Action Bronson makes his lyrics unique and personal, yet the constant, seemingly nonsensical allusions ("Crack the pepper over thin crust that's handmade") call to mind, you guessed it, Ghostface. Still, from a technical aspect his rapping is top-notch, and he maintains that standard over the entire album.
The only place I can criticize Dr. Lecter is in its terrible features. It's for good reason you've never heard of Meyhem Lauren and Shaz Illyork; they're boring, predictable mediocre rappers who have no business being on tracks with Bronson or Mas. Still, the eleven solo tracks are among the most enjoyable on the year, and this album falls squarely into my Top 10 of 2011.
Rating: 9/10
Download

By Crakpot
http://crakpothiphop.blogspot.com/

Friday, 29 July 2011

Vakill-Armor of God

It's been a long time -- I shouldn't have left you... without a fly rec to step to. (I see you're hyper as a heart attack -- nobody's smiling). But I've been sifting through some decidedly meh albums (Moruf's Garden State of Mind, to name one) looking for a juicy review that just wouldn't come. So I decided: You know what? Fuck it. I'll review the next album I download. And when crunch time came, and the all-important decision of whether to DL Armor of God or Legendary Weapons first came up, the coin flip decided against the latter. And here we are.
But as I am cursed with an awful roundabout writing style, this review will be about more than Vakill's latest work; I am attempting to tackle the whole question of why people dislike mainstream hip hop. And while this is a question that many writers more knowledgeable than I have failed in tackling, I hope that if I can't hit the nail on the head, I can at least drive it a little further into the wood. Let's roll.
We all know that mainstream taste is fickle. (Any doubters can simply look at the artists we knew were bound for success in 2008; XXL Freshmen that year included Mickey Factz and Ace Hood.) In seemingly an instant, public opinion can shift between wanting soft ballads to wanting club hits and back again. So then it would make sense that the artists best primed for success could change with the tide; taking a look at Drake's hits, we see romantic ballad ('Best I Ever Had'), posse cut ('Forever') and club banger ('Fancy'). But remove yourself from the mainstream circle and suddenly no one likes Drake anymore. Why?
The answer to that question is that fans of underground hip hop are far less fickle, and more likely to support an artist who does not change his style. The best example of this rift can be found in the hip hop duo Bad Meets Evil. On tracks like 'Renegade' and 'Bad Meets Evil', Eminem and Royce exchanged over-the-top, faux-sadistic punchlines and appeared to be entirely in sync. Then, off of the success of The Slim Shady LP, Eminem blossomed into a superstar and his buddy Royce was left in the dust. Eminem went through all sorts of phases: The hyper-emotional train wreck of The Marshall Mathers LP, the winking-at-inappropriate-without-crossing-boundaries pop star of The Eminem Show, and the hopped-up-on-NyQuil hospital patient of Relapse. Royce, on the other hand, basically stayed the same. Through Death Is Certain, Street Hop, and the Slaughterhouse albums, he's basically remained the same battling punchline rapper of 1998. And while Eminem has been a megastar in the mainstream spotlight, he's largely hated in the underground community; Royce da 5'9" is pretty much universally respected by hip hop heads.
So where is this going, and how does this connect to Vakill? Why have I wasted 4 paragraphs without so much as a lick of useful information? Be patient, padawan. The answer to those rhetorical questions is on the way.
I guess my point is one I have made before, in the context of Lil B's album: Good music comes from truth. Which is why I'll always enjoy Styles P, Fat Joe, early 50 Cent, and yes, Waka Flocka Flame more than artists like Drake or Wale. The former have found a niche that works for them and can consistently make music that sounds truthful; the latter insist on trying to switch up their styles in an attempt to please everyone (being hood yet conscious) and end up sounding corny and fake.
Okay, point made. How does this relate to Armor of God? I thought you'd never ask. The reason I'm telling you all this is because Vakill on here seems like the perfect embodiment of that "I can't do everything, so I might as well stick to what I know" kind of attitude, which makes the album amazing. Here's some bars from the title track which sum up the point I've been trying to make in the last several paragraphs:

Give a fuck if fans okayed it; all I got is my balls and my word
If the streets hold me to my word, we already know where your hands located
Your fears confirming my thesis
The time fabrics in permanent creases
Pressing the luck you weigh, when bucks spray, you lay
Uckfay ouyay, want some positive shit? Motherfucker play Lupe
Armor Of God is wicked cohesive in that aspect; the songs are for the most part either street ballads, or punchline-heavy battle raps, or both. The only places where 'kill falters are when he tries to take things above and beyond, on the passable political effort 'A Lynched Legacy' and the groan-inducing force that is 'Bi-Polar.' Still, those don't come until the very end, so for 13 songs Vakill is his usual hustling self. Which, given his old-school skills and ear for dope lines (“An animal, on his corporate grizzy, spit divine as Corpus Christi, flowing hellfire until your corpse is crispy"), is more than enough, especially considering the production. You know what? (What?) The production deserves its own paragraph.
Panik, who produced 8 of the 16 tracks on here, is simply out of this world, crafting beats that are multi-layered without being flashy or overpowering, and allow Vakill to perfectly display his lyrical talent. In fact, I'll even go so far as to name his production the best beats of the year; I really need to check out the Molemen's solo joints. Maybe I'll check out Ritual Of The... (featuring Aesop Rock, Slug, and MF DOOM), and then, I don't know, write a review or something.
Final Rating: 9/10
Download
By Crakpot
http://crakpothiphop.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, 22 June 2011

What This Blog ls About

A few members of Yahoo Answers will be posting reviews on different albums. A new album should be up around once a week. Most albums are new rap releases, but personal requests can be done...