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The cool-out vibes of "The Visualz" stand up right alongside the most beloved Digable Planets cuts, but the MCs maintain a more lyrical, street credibility. And the hook for "No Soles Dopest Opus," which samples a killer Pharaoh Monch line, "I leave no footprints in the sands of time so these wack MCs can't follow me," over Akinyele's "In the World" beat, actually taken from an obscure radio freestyle on The Stretch & Bobbito Show, still sticks in the memory as one of the great hip-hop hooks. It conflicts completely with the soft jazzy feel of the rest of the track, but that just makes it sound even more awesome every time the song stops to interject it. But the really famous song is the epic eleven+ minute narrative, "A Day Like Any Other," where the beat changes completely each time the MCs change locations in the tale. It was absolutely the mind blower of the year.
Unfortunately, however, they were a pairing doomed to split just as heads were catching on to them. By 1998, Siah had already released his first solo 12" (also on Fondle 'Em) and Yeshua had moved over to Raw Shack. While they were compelled to do a guest appearance or two together, Siah and Yeshua DaEP never released another record as a group; and the magic of their combined efforts was never fully captured again. Not that their solo efforts haven't had merit over the years, but that pinnacle of time they recorded together was a one-off in hip-hop history.
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That's just half the album, though. And this is where the Anthology really takes off. Next up is a song called "Victim of My Own Imagination." Now, Yeshua had a song called "Victim" on his 2002 album, IntoFreshThings, that used the phrase "victim of my own imagination" on the hook, but this is a completely different song, musically and lyrically.
You've got three radio freestyles, which shows off a bit more of their gritty, NYC lyricist sides. And then you've got a three random, I-don't-know-what-the-heck-they-are tracks: "Hairy Bird Intro," "Hairy Bird Reprise" and "Untitled," which, despite their titles, seem to be pretty much full and distinct songs, that are fresh and lush enough to hold up against anything else on this album (there's some awesome flute work on "Untitled"). And finally, you've got a killer demo song that'd been floating around the internet for ages in the form of a radio rip, "It's Good for Your Health." But here it's clean and unmixed.
The presentation is nice, too, with a phat booklet containing vintage photos, labelscans, notes from Bobbito, and pretty much every article ever written about Siah and Yeshua back in the days... The Vinyl Exchange is even in there! It's a mild disappointment that this was originally meant to be a double-disc set, with instrumentals from the original EP, longer freestyles and other tracks, but the artists were against it(?!). Still, it feels pretty full and complete as it is. The only real disappointment was that it was CD only, a move Traffic pulled with a bunch of really promising double LPs they announced. But, for a CD, it's pretty essential.
"Siah and Yeshua DapoED were a rare combination of West coast MCing styles, along the lines of The Good Life guys."
ReplyDeleteNo.
"The cool-out vibes of "The Visualz" stand up right alongside the most beloved Digable Planets cuts, but the MCs maintain a more lyrical, street credibility."
No.
Great record, though.
Ha ha -care to elaborate on what it is you disagree with there?
ReplyDeleteA very slept on project. I never get tired of these tracks. It would've been nice to see them do more as a pair, but I understand that certain things happen in life. This is w/o a doubt a classic.
ReplyDelete"Ha ha -care to elaborate on what it is you disagree with there?"
ReplyDeletewould have been nice if you did that, communicate!
The first comment is from a wack MC! Hahaha!
ReplyDeleteP.S. Happy fourth, niggaz!!! :)
ReplyDelete