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Consumer Guide by Robert Christgau (Image: Beyoncé/COLUMBIA)
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Ghostface Killah: 'More Fish' (Def Jam)

Ghostface Killah
"More Fish"
(Def Jam)

Not really rehashed leftovers but definitely a Christmas snack, this could prove a paradigm shift: major label -- not Sanctuary meets De La or Koch doing its thing -- sticks with quality artist past his commercial prime because he'll certainly break even and possibly sell long-term. Granted, it could just be Jay-Z playing his remaining executive cred for the greater glory of his artistic legacy (which would also be a paradigm shift). But hip-hop is now where rock was in the early '80s, when veterans such as Joni Mitchell, Randy Newman and Lou Reed were the equivalent of what the book trade called publishers' poets back when commercial publishers dealt poetry. Whether doing his ex-Wu thing or mixtaping with the Theodore Unit pals showcased here, Ghostface always tells a good story and finds a good beat. This isn't the gauntlet "Fishscale" was. It's just a good bunch of songs. Thank UniMoth for venturing capital on it.

Grade: A minus


The Knife: 'Silent Shout' (Rabid/Mute)

The Knife
"Silent Shout"

(Rabid/Mute)

Celebrating the lighter side of alienation, the cunning Olof Dreijer elbows comely synthesizer tunelets with sharp synthesizer beatlets as his wacky sister Karin applies a kiddie screech to various bad things. Exactly what these are is hard to say because the lyrics resist parsing as sound and sense. But the musical construction is so jaunty that they can't be serious even if they're cutting their alienated fans out of the joke. Dig it when Karin lowers her voice electronically and duets with herself. Good giggles are so rare in alt these days.

Grade: A minus


Thomas Mapfumo and the Blacks Unlimited: 'Rise Up' (RealWorld)

Thomas Mapfumo and the Blacks Unlimited
"Rise Up"
(RealWorld)

Like Burning Spear at a higher level of elaboration, the Zimbabwean truthteller tends toward the mean. His songs go on, his grooves blend together. So it's a surprise when a lead track constructed of the usual reggaefied mbira materials leaps from the speakers. Clearly, good riffs do still come to Mapfumo, especially when he's pondering his loss of a home market. Nothing else here tops it, and soon you wish he wouldn't hand off so much singing to the ladies. But the details are manifold, and the grooves maintain their mo.

Grade: B plus


The McKay Brothers: 'Cold Beer & Hot Tamales' (Medina River)

The McKay Brothers
"Cold Beer & Hot Tamales"

(Medina River)

Whatever we've been hearing since outlaw was a cliché, no way is honky tonk the key to a higher reality. But I'm glad I met the George Jones imitator who gets to the package store on his lawnmower and am touched by the lachrymose lyricism of the guy whose dog replaces his wife on the passenger seat of his pickup. Their roadhouse wisdom is improved by their Texan bilingualism and their concern for ecology. And when Hollin McKay buys his lifemate some breasts, he does ponder a higher reality: "Do they stand up when you lie down?/How do they make you feel?"

Grade: A minus


Tartit: 'Abacabok' (Crammed Discs)

Tartit
"Abacabok"

(Crammed Discs)

These mostly female Tuareg exiles convened in Belgium in the '90s to brave the world music circuit, with who left Africa when and who went back fuzzy. For all their tinde drums, the folkloric chants of 2000's "Ichichila" seemed static and bare. But since then, the Mali explosion has brought with it Festival in the Desert and its children, and the forward drive here is definitely cognizant of the better-known Tuaregs of Tinariwen. Tartit play faster and ululate more as their self-sufficient gravity accommodates a Westward-looking groove. Afel Bocoum and friends carry one track, less familiar names three others, with Tuareg bassist Nasser a standout. If their veiled faces make you feel guilty, be that way. I take my Islamic connections wherever I can find them.

Grade: A minus


TV on the Radio: 'Return to Cookie Mountain' (Interscope)

TV on the Radio
"Return to Cookie Mountain"
(Interscope)

Proud foe of prog, poetasters and their debut album, I filed this under overwrought 'til I could bear the clamor of their youthful cohort no longer, and soon I was sucker-punched by its opening salvo, four sour treated-horns-with-sitar notes that remain the best thing on the record, immediately followed by the second-best thing, Tunde Adebimpe's pained falsetto "I was a lover before this war." Together, these are enough to justify the record's ominous tone. Though hardly straightforward, neither music nor lyrics are obscure. Instead, emotional dislocations are contextualized for once -- blamed on Bush and/or capitalism, actually, which rather than a cop out is almost an analysis. Never rousing and too often glum, the album is carried by its intelligence, integrity and terrible beauty. Difficult but durable music and point but open-ended verbiage that conveys what a bummer it is to struggle fruitlessly with your own political impotence.

Grade: A minus

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  • Nov. 2009: Nellie McKay, Modest Mouse and More Get Nods; Kid Sister, Blitzen Trapper, Monsters of Folk and More Receive Honorable Mentions; Arctic Monkeys's "Humbug" Is Dud of the Month
  • Oct. 2009: Black Eyed Peas, Jay-Z, Miranda Lambert and More Get Nods; Major Lazer, Chrisette Michele, Maxwell and More Receive Honorable Mentions; Ginuwine's "A Man's Thoughts" Is Dud of the Month
  • Sept. 2009: Dead Weather, Willie Nelson and More Get Nods; Bottle Rockets, Nelson and More Receive Honorable Mentions; Rascal Flatts' "Greatest Hits Volume 1" Is Dud of the Month
  • Aug. 2009: J Dilla's "Jay Stay Paid," Patterson Hood's "Murdering Oscar (And Other Love Songs)," Regina Spektor's "Far" and More Get Nods; J Dilla, Ida Maria and More Receive Honorable Mentions; Grizzly Bear's "Veckatimest" Is Dud of the Month
  • July 2009: Moby's "Wait for Me," Mos Def's "The Ecstatic," Sonic Youth's "The Eternal," Allen Toussaint's "The Bright Mississippi" and More Get Nods; Pet Shop Boys, Cut Copy and More Receive Honorable Mentions; "21st Century Breakdown" by Green Day Is Dud of the Month
  • June 2009: Leonard Cohen's "Live in London," Doom's "Born Like This," Bob Dylan's "Together Through Life," the Hold Steady's "A Positive Rage," New York Dolls's "'Cause I Sez So" and More Get Nods; PJ Harvey, Conor Oberst, Marnie Stern, Cursive and More Receive Honorable Mentions; "Relapse" by Eminem Is Dud of the Month
  • May 2009: Art Brut's "Art Brut vs. Satan, Lady Sovereign's "Jigsaw," the Yeah Yeah Yeahs' It's Blitz!," Neil Young's "Fork in the Road" and More Get Nods; Mr. Lif, Neko Case, Flight of the Conchords, Lady GaGa and more receive honorable mentions; Bat for Lashes' "Two Suns" is Dud of the Month
  • April 2009: Lily Allen, Amadou & Mariam, Marianne Faithfull and More Get Nods; M. Ward, the Prodigy, Leela James and more receive honorable mentions; Shearwater's "Rook" is Dud of the Month
  • March 2009: Clipse, K'Naan and the Living Things Get Nods; Ludacris, Soulja Boy Tell 'Em and More Receive Honorable Mentions; the Knux Are Dud of the Month
  • February 2009: Calle 13, Glasvegas, Guns N' Roses and Nine Inch Nails Get Nods; Fall Out Boy's "Folie à Deux" is Dud of the Month
  • January 2009: Taylor Swift, T-Pain and Kanye West Get Nods; Darius Rucker, Akon and More Receive an Honorable Mentions; Beyoncé's "I Am ... Sasha Fierce" is Dud of the Month
  • December 2008: Buena Vista Social Club, GZA/Genius, T.I. Get Nods; Lucinda Williams, Ice Cube, Young Jeezy and More Receive an Honorable Mentions; Plies Is Dud of the Month
  • November 2008: TV on the Radio and Poet Robert Creeley Get Nods; Iron & Wine, Todd Snider and Blitzen Trapper Get Honorable Mentions; Bon Iver Is Dud of the Month
  • October 2008: Jenny Lewis Gets a Nod; Jeffrey Lewis Is Dud of the Month
  • September 2008: The Hold Steady, Conor Oberst and Randy Newman Get Nods; Natasha Bedingfield Is Dud of the Month
  • August 2008: Nas Names Names (But Not His Album), Death Cab For Cutie Get Complimented and the Dean Deep Sixes the Three 6 Mafia
  • July 2008: Lil Wayne Gets a Good Review from the Dean (He's Also "Dud of the Month"
  • June 2008: Magnetic Fields, Santogold and More Get Compliments; Leona Lewis Is Dud of the Month
  • May 2008: The B-52's, Drive-by Truckers and the Roots All Receive High Marks
  • April 2008: Kate Nash, Los Campesinos!, Erykah Badu, Mika, Kathleen Edwards, Snoop Dogg and More
  • March 2008: Daft Punk, Lupe Fiasco, Willie Nelson, Herbie Hancock and More
  • Feb. 2008: Mary J. Blige, Manu Chao, Jill Scott and More
  • Jan. 2008: Hail Hip-Hop! Ghostface Killah and Wu-Tang Clan, Soulja Boy and More
  • Dec. 2007: M.I.A., Gogol Bordello Rate Perfect
  • Nov. 2007: White Stripes Not Icky But Nick Rates Low
  • Oct. 2007: Kanye Graduates With an A-Minus but 50 Cent's a Dud
  • Sept. 2007: Common, Fountains of Wayne, Bright Eyes Make the Dean's List
  • Aug. 2007: Lucinda Is Laudable but Pretty Ricky Is a Dud
  • July 2007: Miranda Lambert, Arctic Monkeys and More
  • June 2007: Wilco, Apples in Stereo, Hot Chip and More
  • April - May 2007: Beck, Nas, the Arcade Fire and More
  • Feb. - March 2007: Beyoncé, Lily Allen and More
  • Dec. 2006 - Jan. 2007: Bob Dylan, the Hold Steady and More
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