Friday, October 7, 2011

Do You Want More (Audio CD)

Do You Want More
Do You Want More (Audio CD)
By The Roots

Buy new: $8.48
91 used and new from $0.97
Customer Rating: 4.8

Customer tags: hip hop(32), the roots(13), 1995(6), rap(6), east coast(6), black thought(6), music(4), malik b(2), bills cd collection, cd, diceraw, classic

Review & Description

Track Listing: 1. Intro / There's Something Goin' On 2. Proceed 3. Distortion To Static 4. Mellow My Man [Explicit] 5. I Remain Calm 6. Datskat 7. Lazy Afternoon 8. ? Vs. Rahzel 9. Do You Want More?!!!??! [Explicit] 10. What Goes On Pt. 7 11. Essaywhuman?!!!??! 12. Swept Away 13. You Ain't Fly 14. Silent Treatment 15. The Lesson Pt. 1 16. The UnlockingTypically, we're better off ignoring the boasts of a rapper who claims to describe his own music, but when the Roots' lead voice Black Thought opens up his group's debut album by saying, "You are all about to witness some organic hip-hop jazz," it's a good idea to listen up. Organic is a fitting adjective for a hip-hop crew whose m.o. is as different from the typical studio-locked DJ/MC combo as grass is to Astroturf.

Nothing wrong with a little artificial grazeland, of course, but the Roots are making tasty roughage that blooms into real songs, where raps wind around bass, drums, keys, and horns, and where instruments coil up to voice cadences--where music and lyrics meet and grow together naturally, not coincidentally. You can hear the Roots' heart pump hardest when they pull off the things loops and samples cannot: just check the vocal/instrument interchanges of "Essaywhuman?!!!??!" or the left-turn instrumental digression midway through "Mellow My Man" to witness the living sounds of rap.

The Roots' Philadelphia-based groove collective build slick acid jazz playing around the smooth East Coast rhyming of A Tribe Called Quest and wild West Coast freestyling to create sounds as formless and fluid as jazz, but never unrecognizable as hip-hop. The music picks up where the mad scatting and melodic trills of L.A.'s defunct Freestyle Fellowship left off, and wakes up the tired hype of jazz/rap cross-polination to new possibilities. The roots of this kind of fusion have long been around, though perhaps these Roots are hope for a new dawning. --Roni Sarig Read more


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