Wednesday, December 7, 2011

The Roots- Undun Album


Artist: The Roots
Title: Undun
Release Date: 12/06/2011
My Rating:
★★★★

The Roots may be best known in the mainstream for their nightly gig as the house band on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon, and through the years they’ve justifiably become attached to an extrordinary live show. Now, though, they’ve returned to the studio for their latest retail release, undun, where they take a new approach: a concept album, with the storytelling in reverse order. Recounting the first-person tale of Redford Stephens, a hustler who didn’t make it past 25, the Philly based band begins the record with his death, and tracks the tale backward, as the album’s ill-fated protagonist faces the street life and its often inescapable woes. The crew beautifully arranges harmonic strings, gloomy keys and sturdy drums with seamlessly implemented guest spots from the likes of Big K.R.I.T., Phonte, Dice Raw and Bilal, as questions of fate and free will persist; how much of Redford’s story was already determined due to the circumstances under which he was born?
Multiple voices converging to tell one story results in a far more interconnected listen than it probably should, but this oddity is part of what’s so great about undun. It’s a bit unorthodox but magnificent sonically, as well, as five of the 14 tracks don’t have vocals: the opener, as well as the last four. This allows the necessary means to ease in and out of a heavy album, giving an opportunity to soak in the track-by-track events and story as a whole.
Each song seeps smoothly into the next; most are able to stand on their own, but shine when reinforced by what precedes and follows. A concept album with an equally heavy focus on musicianship and rhymes, undun fantastically transports into the tragic narrative.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Vado- Slime Flu 2 (Mixtape)

slime-flu-internet-version
Artist: Vado
Title: Slime Flu 2
Release Date: 11/25/2011
My Rating:
★★★


Vado is swiftly becoming a vocal focal point for Harlem, and his latest mixtape Slime Flu 2 proves to be a welcome installment to his ever-growing collection of no-holds-barred rap. Built around head-nodding production that graciously caters to the streets, records like “Keep It Goin’” and “NY Ride” find him endorsing the grind, while “I See You (Black People)” details a more reflective Vado. Then there’s “Slime Anthem,” which perfectly encapsulates what Cam’ron saw in the Lennox Ave-representative. Over blaring horns and steady drums, Vado verbally assaults the track like he’s back on the corner earning his stripes. His ear for beats is still a work in progress (“Louis V Bag,” “U Know What It Is”), and a scant variety of subject matter may stave off new listeners that are more accustomed to the idiosyncrasies of radio. If Slime Flu 2 is any indication of what Vado has in store though, Cam’ron should have no worries about his protégé’s future. SLIMEEEE!