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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
christen your car stereo to these beats, January 12, 2005
This review is from: Champion Sound (Audio CD)
This album is the kind of collaboration that is more of a competition, featuring both producers trying to outdo each other with loud, bass heavy, head bobbing, all-out dope beats. Jay Dilla is known for his soulful Detroit bounce, and Madlib (here, at least) employs a kind of wobbly, throbbing, jazz sound. They are both going for similar things in production, sometimes going the far east route, sometimes taking jazz loops or mangled soul loops, but usually relying on the thumping drum tracks instead of rich musical loops. If you like these guys' work, you will enjoy the beats.
The rhymes are okay. Neither one of these guys try to push boundaries as far as subject matter. They talk about how good the music is, how dangerous Detroit and LA are, and complain about how women want things in return for sex. The guests are a little better than Jay Dilla and Madlib (Quasimoto makes a couple visits too), but even the incredibly skilled Talib Kweli doesn't deliver any lyrical depth.
But even though the rhymes were thrown together, the album is bangin, and that is what it was supposed to be. Not a classic, and maybe not something that will stay in rotation for several years. But the beats are how.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Two great producers equals one good CD, October 12, 2003
This review is from: Champion Sound (Audio CD)
The concept is deceptively simple: one great hip-hop producer raps over the beats of the another great hip-hop producer, and they inverse the method and split the record pretty much down the middle. If this were a couple of round-the-way producers that blow up on MTV every other day, this would raise about as much sand as the stale Jay-Z/R. Kelly "Best of Both Worlds" flop. Fortunately, we're offered an exciting match-up between one of hip-hop's most unsung beat-heros (Jay Dee - Slum Village, Tribe Called Quest, etc.) and one of hip-hop's freshest musical voice in years (Madlib - the Blue Note "Shades of Blue" re-imagining, as well as rapping alter ego Quasimoto). Putting these two crate diggers in a studio together for the length of a record is akin to putting Pharoah Snders and Lonnie Liston Smith in a studio for a month and saying, "Have at". Their styles are that distinct. Neither of these guys gets the props they deserve in the overall hip-hop community (Jay Dee should be living in Puffy's house if success came down to sheer button-pushing, beat-drawing talent and Madlib should be driving off with no less than five of Jermaine Dupri's Bentleys), and it is this underground freedom that opens the door for all of the potential in the world. Yet, it is this same freedom that hamstrings the album in spots. Make no mistake: Madlib brings the more diverse, ludicrously original music to this project, while much of Jay Dee's beat offerings are re-visited territory. Still good stuff, but not as mind-blowingly refreshing as his partner's action. Lyrically, the album is fun when it isn't taking barely satricial swipes at club gangsterism (the key word being "barely", meaning I'm not sure if they're satirizing it or if they actually intend to sell these stories in the same vein and path as the stories they're similar to). They've kept the guest appearances to a minimum, which pushes both of the artists to the limits of their expression. Madlib is forced to take a decidedly less jazz-oriented approach to the music for the record to be cohesive, while Jay Dee has to take on a lot of lyrical weight here he isn't exactly touted for any other time. All in all, we are left with a pretty darn good hip-hop record. fans of Madlib who come to this will miss some of the fuzzy lo-fi jazz that is his stock in trade, but will find enough here to keep them playing it. Fans of Jay Dee's work can't lose; they will have hit the motherlode here in the accumulation of even more of Jay Dee's trademark-funky beats, but also in having uncovered another incredibly original cat in Madlib.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The album title says it all, April 1, 2006
This review is from: Champion Sound (Audio CD)
I'm gonna get right to the point, This CD is amazing. It is a CD put together by two producers, so everyone saying how bad the lyrics are, its not really about the lyrics. The Beats are sick, nuff said. This CD, production wise, blows anything away. No matter what kind of Rap/Hiphop fan you are, I'm sure you will like this CD. But I do have to say this CD has grown on me, if you are a first time listener, be aware. It could give you a weird vibe at first. Check it out.
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