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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
In This Month's Column Abe Vigoda's
"Skeleton," Buck 65's "Dirtbike," Clipse's "Re-Up Gang Records Present: Re-Up
Gang: The Saga Continues," DJ /Rupture's "Uproot," Eddy Current Suppression
Ring's "Primary Colours," Kal's "Radio Romanista," K'naan's "Troubadour," La
Cherga's "Fake No More" and the Living Things's "Habeas Corpus"; plus, Honorable Mentions/Choice Cuts (Ludacris, Soulja Boy
Tell 'Em) and Dud of the Month/More Duds (The Knux)
By Robert Christgau Special to MSN Music
March 2009
Normally around now I'm feasting on critics' poll leftovers. This year not so
much. But I thank the Pitchfork trendmongers for going overboard on that DJ
/rupture album as well as Fennesz and Esau Mwanwaya down in Duds -- and a bunch
of Pazz & Jop voters I've barely heard of for backing up my old eddytor
Chuck Eddy's tip on the aptly named Eddy Current Suppression Ring.
Abe Vigoda "Skeleton" (PPM)
No Age too brutalist for you? Here's a heedlessly
beautiful alternative. Read the misspelled lyrics and you might take these young
Angelenos for lost post-collegians or just figure they're children in search of
a magic place. But since you can't understand a word they sing, in the end
you'll go with a sound that subsumes those vocals in an exalted high-speed
weave. It's what might have happened if Steve Reich and Philip Glass had started
a no wave band instead of leaving the job to Glenn Branca. It's what people like
about Battles unless what they like is the airless
precision.
Grade: A MINUS
Buck
65 "Dirtbike" (No
label)
I value my time too much to mess with downloads on spec, but knowing me for a
fan, Nova Scotian rap mutant Rich Terfry was slick enough to burn me three
untracked one-hour CDs. These have been good by now for five-six spins apiece,
usually as background music -- as my wife will vouch, they're excellent for
sharing breakfast or settling down to sleep. The beats are basic and original --
dig that bluegrass, that koto, that Shadowy thrum. Ever the wordslinger, Buck is
usually rhyming, and usually worth hearing when you direct your ears his way:
"Hooker in a mink coat died on a Friday/Crappy UFO on the side of the highway,"
"Can't make sense of the menu I'm readin'/Mistakenly playin' the wrong venue in
Sweden." We'll find out whether there are Real Songs here when he releases a
Real Album. I just hope he salvages the 50 Cent dis 42 minutes into the second
disc, where he IDs his philosophy of hip-hop as Italian neo-realism as opposed
to MGM. "I created a religion based on wild misinterpretation," he raps.
"Dancing is not important to me -- you got a problem with that?"
Grade: B PLUS
Clipse "Re-Up Gang Records Present: Re-Up Gang: The Saga
Continues" (BCD)
The cover copy goes on, too. Not just "Parental Advisory Explicit Lyrics," as
in "tickle us pink like white girl's clitoris," but "The Official Mixtape --
Remixed & Remastered." That's to let alert consumers infer that it
repackages 13 tracks from the first two "We Got It 4 Cheap" mixtapes, the second
of which is longer and on balance better if you can find it. But broad-voiced
Re-Up sidekicks and all, this one stands as a chilling introduction to Clipse's
nasty little coke-centric world. Even the jacked beats share the Neptunes'
efficiency-expert approach to two self-invented moguls Pharrell must sometimes regret he helped off the
corner. From the two rappers' clipped flow -- Malice killingly precise, Pusha
aiming at the same target -- to their analytic rhymes, these are two of the
least likable guys in hip-hop. I mean, at least Plies is some kind of goon and Fat Joe some kind of glutton. But Clipse's smarts and
purity are seductive in the manner of a Jim Thompson novel, even a John Donne
meditation: "I'm a warrior, poet laureate, May 13th-born Taurean, cocaine
courier/So ahead of my time/Like Back to the Future but minus the DeLorean."
Grade: A MINUS
DJ /rupture "Uproot" (The
Agriculture)
At first I thought, Why so glum, chum? Listenable and well-mixed, the guy's
rep precedes him. But emotionally I heard little more than the downcast
post-high of the chillout room. Only then the record flipped on me. There's
plenty in the world to be bummed about, and if the cultural fate of the Middle
East isn't as high on that long list as it was a year ago, Rupture is here to
remind us that it's still around to bite us in the collective ass. No fan of his
art-dance scene, I don't recognize a single source record of the 24 he flows in
here. But in this sequence they speak to me of resilience, intelligence,
openness and loss. Most aren't explicitly Islamic, but Middle Eastern sounds and
rhythms contextualize the toasting, the dub, the electronica effects. Elegiac
rather than dancey, but elegiac about the preconditions of the dance, it states,
sustains, and varies a bracing mood. It even has an ending.
Grade: A MINUS
Eddy Current Suppression Ring "Primary
Colours" (Goner)
Three-plus decades after the initial dispensation, one more punk band out of
the blue (Melbourne, but it could be anywhere in the English-speaking world)
does the same thing punk bands have always done, only not exactly plus it sounds
like they just thought of it last week, three days after they started practicing
in the bassist's basement. Off-key chants, minimal chords, spare arrangements,
into confusion rather than rage from "long-term memory loss" to "a little bit of
kissing and a whole lot of hugging." Some are no longer susceptible to this
recurrent miracle. Too bad for them.
Grade: A MINUS
Kal "Radio
Romanista" (Asphalt Tango)
Guitarist Dragan Ristic is a Serbian Roma impresario-bandleader-propagandist
whose preservationism is proudly mongrel in the great Roma tradition. Where
Kal's 2006 debut was beefed up by guest instrumentalists and vocalists, the
follow-up showcases Ristic's seven-piece "Rock'n'Roma" touring unit, which is
less full, but peppier. I'll take the tradeoff -- try sitting still for the
kickoff "Krasnokalipsa," the DNA-altering "Romozom," or the
bitter-in-translation "Ding Deng Dong." But I could use more input from the
likes of Serbian rapper Marcelo at the start and Serbian sister Jelena Markovic
at the end. And I still wish Ristic sang not just in Romany, Serbian, Spanish,
and French, but English, dammit. Hey, over here! We're the superpower! Aren't
we?
Grade: B PLUS
K'naan "Troubadour" (A&M/Octone)
What makes K'naan's hip-hop Somalian is less the authenticating stories he
tells than the atmospheric samples he claims -- after a snatch of Marley ska,
the borrowed stuff is all Buda Musique swing from up Addis Ababa way. But lest
you think him a do-gooders' rehab project like Emmanuel Jal or Sierra Leone's Refugee All-Stars, be hereby informed that when this
ambitious and optimistic fellow talks "song hook," he knows whereof he speaks --
just as he does when he rhymes in the English he learned as a teenager, though I
hope he outgrows "Somalia"'s -ation rhymes. Chubb Rock and Mos Def cameos are about it for his hip-hop cred, but
Damian Marley-Adam Levine-Kirk Hammett is a pretty
good pass at pop cred. Not that they guarantee sales. But after what K'naan has
been through, bless him for trying -- the ebullience he extracts from a life
much tougher than North Americans can know is worthy of soukous, mbaqanga, the
highlife of Ghana's most punishing inflationary spiral. Spiritually Afropop,
rhythmically Ameripop -- instead of hip-hop, maybe we should call it rap. He
likes the word fine himself.
Grade: A MINUS
La Cherga "Fake No More" (Asphalt
Tango)
Two Kosovan masterminds, two Macedonian horn players, and two Serbians
manning guitar and bass pursue pan-Balkan dub in Austrian exile. The music isn't
as hot or goulash-like as stay-at-homes will hear from cosmopolitans who slum
around looking for "interesting, romantic people," to quote chief mastermind
Irina Karamarkovic. It's sprightly, light, controlled, although danceable if you
know the steps and probably if you don't. Karamarkovic's small, supple voice and
Anglophone lyrics infuse the lightness with brains and laughter, which for me
equals sex appeal. Keep all your smoky EU chanteuses and their safe-word
s&m. I'll take this sometime voice teacher tempting a fate she defies by
name, warning of bandits who rob the brain-dead, chiding slivovich-sipping
tourists in one verse and cheerfully encouraging them to come on come on the
next.
Grade: A MINUS
The Living Things "Habeas
Corpus" (Jive)
Five years after this St. Louis brother band dropped their bomb, they drop
their follow-up, and somehow -- though kneejerk revolutionary Lillian Berlin has
since had two kids with the director of his first video -- they're still true
believers in the cleansing if not excoriating power of rock and roll. Leading
their theoretical followers into the streets in "Brass Knuckles" only to pine
for "the good life" in "Mercedes Marxist," they aim for a higher consistency: a
collective grandeur that evokes AOR and punk simultaneously. Their retro is
familiar in outline even though you can't name a single band who sound like
them. Well, maybe the MC5 a little. But Rob Tyner was a blues-stud wannabe.
Lillian murmurs his provocations from within a chorale.
Grade: A MINUS
More: Honorable Mentions/Choice
Cuts | Dud of the Month/More
Duds |
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Read all of Robert Christgau's reviews on
MSN Music
- Sept.
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
- 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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