當一位說唱歌手將整張新專輯的節拍創作任務交給單一製作人時,通常會發生一些神奇的事情。這可能是因為緊密的工作環境能讓膨脹的自我和更大的團隊被推到一邊,但當兩位藝術家聚在一起,碰撞想法並合作時,創作出的音樂就像節拍和韻腳的完美結合。這種設置成為了一些說唱最受喜愛的二重奏的基礎——Gang Starr,Pete Rock & CL Smooth,Run The Jewels——但這個流派的歷史也充斥著輝煌的單次示例,展示了MC與製作人合作,達成了嘻哈煉金術。當化學反應發生時,關係會為每一方揭示出一個新的維度,無論是說唱歌手被引入更深思熟慮和個人的領域,還是製作人開始嘗試新鮮的聲音和取樣,這些都是與他們通常的聲音基石大相徑庭的創意飛躍。年長的嘻哈迷會堅稱,這種簡化的公式是音樂黃金時代如此活力四射的部分原因,但這種設置至今仍被成功利用。這是對一位說唱歌手和一位製作人的項目最重要的時間順序致敬。
Legendary bearded producer Rick Rubin enjoyed a rap renaissance after his executive production work on Kanye West’s Yeezus, but back in 1985 he could be found commandeering the debut album of another cocksure rapper going by the name of Ladies Love Cool James. The combination is devastating: Rubin's sparse, drum machine-powered beats set the background for the teenage rapper to fire off precocious knockout punchlines on tracks like the title cut, "Dangerous," and the anthemic "Rock The Bells." Foreshadowing his later moves into the rock world, Rubin adds abrasive snatches of electric guitar to the otherwise minimal "You'll Rock," while LL anoints himself the "number one b-boy" in the process of claiming "The great Edgar Allan Poe couldn't write this good."
Marley Marl had a huge hand in shaping the sound of hip-hop's fabled golden era. Playing a quarterback role, he fused raw funk and soul breakbeats with sparky samples from artists like James Brown, Otis Redding and 7th Wonder and then served the resulting beats up for all-star Juice Crew MCs like Big Daddy Kane, Roxanne Shante and Biz Markie to spit over. But it's on the debut album from Marley's fellow Queensbridge native MC Shan that the blueprint comes through in its purest form. Released on the influential Cold Chillin' label, the nine track project sparks into life with the anti-crack sermon "Jane, Stop This Crazy Thing," before a run of songs that close out the first side of the album showcase Shan and Marley's synergy in full force. Beginning with "The Bridge," a song that instigated hip-hop's most revered dis war, and taking in "Kill That Noise" and the spunky "Down By Law," the neck-snapping beats and braggadocio raps sound like the two artists are skillfully distilling hip-hop's essence down to its purest form.
With his ability to mix a languid and fluid flow with menacing gangsta rap lyrics, Snoop Doggy Dogg introduced himself to the world as a guest on Dr. Dre's eerie soundtrack offering "Deep Cover." It was a combination that would soon be fleshed out into the Doggfather's 1993 debut album, Doggystyle, which took the G-Funk template Dre had blessed the world with on his own The Chronic project and turned it even more cinematic and melodious. As the lanky khaki-clad kid from Long Beach runs riot with his "G'z up, hoes down" manifesto, Dre increases the stakes by taking on an expansive role that's closer to that of a movie director than traditional hip-hop producer. Under Dre's watchful eye, the skits, the sequencing and the texture of Doggystyle deliver a completely immersive start-to-finish listening experience (and one that's best enjoyed with a cup of the now infamous gin and juice). These days Snoop can be found flirting with Martha Stewart, and Dre seems mostly occupied with being a headphone mogul, but back in the nine tre' these two delivered slick and undeniable gangsta rap gold.
Jeru The Damaja's second studio album might not be the most obvious project that comes to mind when highlighting the production genius of DJ Premier, but the 15-track project is a telling showcase for both Premo's boom-bap style and his unwavering allegiance to an underground ethos. Released at the time when Puff Daddy was taking the jiggy hip-hop vibe to mainstream riches, Jeru took it upon himself to strike back at the vacant flashiness of those artists he perceived as sellouts to themselves and the culture. "Yo, are you a pimp, a hustler?" asks Premier on the intro to the first single, "Ya Playin' Yaself," before Jeru answers in the negative and goes on to studiously reign blows on "all these so called players up in the rap game" while righteously pointing out, "I never knew hustlers confessed in stereo." Also of note is "Invasion," a song which first appeared on the New Jersey Drive soundtrack and, included as the final track on Wrath Of The Math, works as a primer on Jeru's social commentary and Premo's ability to freak angular and awkward samples into head-nodding hip-hop music.
When Jay Z rhymed how he "ain't been rhyming like Common" since he sold five million records, it was a barb that seemed to stick in the mind of Kanye West, who'd grown up idolizing the music and rhymes of his fellow Chi-Town representer. While West himself blew up, Common's career seemed to have stalled, with the rapper claiming a body of albums from the '90s that were cherished by hip-hop purists but ignored by the mainstream. Enter Ye's offer to produce 2005's Be, which satiated both critical and commercial demands. The overarching tone of the project is soulful, switching cannily from the gritty and mealy vibe of "The Corner" (which features the Last Poets) to the smooth energy of "Go." By capping the tracklist at 11 songs, Common is able to focus his thoughts and channel his witty wordplay into a series of songs that resonate with the listener on an emotional level. As liner note scholars will be aware, technically J Dilla contributes two songs to the album (the Marvin Gaye-sampling "Love Is" and the shimmering coda "It's Your World (Part 1 & 2)"), but the essence of Be is all about two of Chicago's most beloved musical sons getting together and reigniting their love of hip-hop.
The combination of Madlib's beats topped with MF Doom's lyrics endures as a modern underground hip-hop standard bearer. Whether by accident or design, many of the songs that make up the Madvillainy collaboration come in at around the one or two minute mark. It's a format that grants the Beat Konducta the chance to serve up a hypnotic smorgasbord of his deepest dug samples while the Super Villain drops abstract vignettes based on keen-eyed details, like on the spectral "Meat Grinder" where a pair of old tan-colored Ellesse tennis shoes literally tie the song together. As the album settles to a finish with the hazy "Rhinestone Cowboy," it's like you've been granted a clandestine, behind-the-scenes peek at the alchemic process of two of hip-hop's most elusive creators.
2007 was a curious time for the music industry. Physical sales were down, the vinyl resurrection hadn't kicked in yet, and digital sales weren't picking up the slack. Against this backdrop, the independently-released debut offering from the Los Angeles-based rapper Blu and fellow west coast beatsmith Exile became both highly sought after yet often impossible to get hold of as supply couldn’t keep up with underground demand. Listening back a decade later proves that the hype was on point. Blu relays personal and worldly thoughts without coming off as preachy, while Exile's chunky beats nod slyly back to the '90s without ever coming off as dated. What charms most about Below The Heavens is the way it exudes an abundant love for the art of hip-hop. As Blu confesses on "The Narrow Path": "I need a pen, I need a pad, I need a place to go/ To get this shit lifted up off of my soul."
Before Run The Jewels became a phenomenon, the seeds for the odd couple pairing of southern rap firebrand Killer Mike and Brooklyn beat technician El-P were sewn with 2012's R.A.P. Music. From the opening blast of "Big Beast," which also drafts in Bun B and T.I. for vocal assists, the credo is simple: Recreate the uncompromising power and pomp of the sort of early era Def Jam records both artists grew up studying while also bringing back the outspoken political opinions of turn-of-the-'90s hip-hop. El Producto's beats are all about monstrous hyper-bass tones and pugilistic drum patterns mixing with beguiling atonal atmospherics, while Mike sounds like an artist who’s been finally unleashed after toiling away in the rap industry for a decade. On the anti-police brutality outing "Don't Die" he seethes: "I'm a Public Enemy because I'm cold lampin'/ And I don't give a fuck about a party in the Hamptons/ And I don't give a fuck about a motherfucking Forbes list/ Far as I'm concerned that's a motherfucking whore's list." Revolutionary poetry in full effect.
2014's Cocaine Pinata (to give the album its intended pre-censoring title) proved that the street-wrought gangsta polemics of Freddie Gibbs meshed naturally with Madlib's eclectic, off-kilter beats. "They're supplying dope to the black and Mexican communities," runs the opening vocal sample, but what follows is so much more than just another collection of contraband-centric raps. By delivering a series of beats that pivot from soulful to frantic and flip from swaggering to introspective, Madlib teases out what might be Gibbs's most complete MC performance to date. On the surface, a track like "Harold's" seems like a back-in-the-day tribute to an old fried food shack, but it soon turns into a nostalgic commentary on the community Gibbs grew up in. It's a trick Gibbs repeats on the plaintive "Broken," where he recalls a conversation with his grandmother that ends with him wishing, "Promise I've done seen everything but old age/ Pray my demons never catch up from my old ways."
On paper, Days With Dr. Len Yo sounds like the sort of pretentious art-rap project that can easily go astray: Lyrics inspired by the mind control theme of the book The Manchurian Candidate are paired with production that most times eschews drum breaks in favor of nothing more than experimental atmospheric samples and sound effects. In execution, the cult Brooklyn-based rapper Ka and producer Preservation took the conceit and crafted 2015's most bewitching hip-hop album. Taking time out from his duties as Mos Def's tour DJ, Preservation weaves together a production bed that bases entire tracks around pared down sounds like a blues guitar riff ("Day 1125") or swirling elongated synth notes ("Day 0”). For his part Ka pens lyrics that are equal parts personal and sagely political. "Last of the craftsmen/ To the masses I'm a has-been," Ka laments on the spooky closing cut "Day 912," although as the learned Earl Sweatshirt tweeted while bigging up the genius of the album: “Dr. Len Yo was the greatest album of this year no questions asked if you don’t know now you know.”
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