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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Party Music for the Coming Revolution, August 22, 2006
Anyone who tries to tell me that rap is all about bling bling and a glamorized drug culture needs to take a listen to the Coup. This group does what I thought couldn't be done, they make intelligent, funny, and poignant rap music with a deep groove and a sense of how to rock a party. In fact, this Oakland duo is making party music for the coming revolution.
The Coup is Pam the Funkstress as DJ and Boots Riley, MC. Pam's work is amazing here, both as a scratcher and as a producer with an ear for big fun grooves. The influence of classic funk is all over this CD. Jams like Laugh/Love/F*&% and Monkey Off Your Back have a serious four on them that recalls classic P-Funk, while Shoyoass has a keyboard solo on it that might have come straight from Bernie Worell. Even the sillier stuff like Head (of State) and I Love Boosters are characterized by grooves that won't quit and make your feet want to get up and move. In fact, if another rapper was over top these beats it not hard to imagine any number of them as club hits.
But another rapper isn't working in this duo and thank God for that. Boots Riley is one of the more gifted and intelligent rappers working today. His rhymes are passionate, often very funny, and occasionally moving without the "slice of life" street violence of even the most socially conscious mainstream rappers. What other rapper would mix a call to revolution with a call to party. ("If I can't change the world I ain't leavin'/Baby that's why you should call me this ev'nin') Boots wants revolution, there's no question. He mixes a street smart sensibility with fairly well developed revolutionary thought, but he is at his most humorous when he's most political. His use of a childhood street taunt to recap the secret history of the Iraq conflict is both funny and frightening since it's all true. The ongoing skit and song about Assbreathkillers is hilarious and a call to all people to examine how much we put up with day to day from those who we allow to have power over us.
But Riley is also an extremely versatile rapper. Lay Around All Day In Bed is one of the sexiest raps I've ever heard, mixing a sensuous groove from Pam that recalls classic Bootsy Collins with a sexy rap about not wanting to leave your woman for your work. Being Boots, he brings in resentment against meaningless work and the daily grind and eventually builds the track into a call for social revolution...but he does it soooooo smoothly. Boots also tells stories that in other hands could be fairly maudlin, such as Tiffany Hall, a tribute to a young black woman of intelligence, who's self-image is marred by her heavy frame and who dies of complications from botched liposuction. In other hands this would almost surely be played for irony or laughs, but Boots plays it totally straight and the track becomes an honest self-criticism (he admits that he too made fun of her large backside) and an indictment of a society that would put more emphasis on the shape of a woman rather than the spirit she shows.
The tracks on this disc are enhanced by some rather incredible musicians, who help the disc maintain a live funk sound rather than the rather old sounding looped hip hop which still dominates the genre. And several tracks feature the voice of Silk E, a singer with whom I am unfamiliar but who impresses me very much. In fact, Silk E gets the most moving track of the album all to herself, the surprisingly poignant Baby Let's Have A Baby (Before Bush Do Something Crazy). Despite the humorous sounding this track is a tender cry for love from a woman who has just gotten her life together and stopped smoking crack and looking for a little permanence in a world which seems careening towards destruction. Silk E's voice is tremulous with emotion and makes the track deeply affecting.
All in all, Pick a Bigger Weapon proves that, despite impressions to the contrary, it is possible to produce a socially conscious, politically progressive rap album that is also entertaining and a blast to dance to. Other highly political MCs like Immortal Technique, Dead Prez and Son of Nun should take a page from Boots and Pam and remember that it's no coincidence that political parties have the word PARTY in them. After all, in the words of George Clinton, free your mind and you're a** will follow!
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Beautiful, angry dance music to make the damn revolution come quicker, June 22, 2006
This is the sexiest revolution record since "What's Going On" and the smartest state-of-the-world dance record since the peak of The Clash. I've had this playing constantly since I bought it.
"My Favorite Mutiny" will catch a lot of people, as it should. "Laugh/Love/F**k" is what "Songs in the Key of Life" would've sounded like if Huey Newton was on the mic. "The Stand" is beautiful & heartbreaking, with the threatened violence not about putting up a front but the last stand of a family man who has been pushed to the edge -- filled with lush strings, wah-wah guitar and a warm Hammond organ. The whole thing has an early Prince feel peeking out behind the 70s funk.
The musicians are all superb. It sounded like Parliament players and it turns out some of them are on the sessions. Boots Riley is that hip-hop guy Bob Dylan predicted (in the autobiography "Chronicles") would be the one to carry on the serious work.
A few of the last tracks lose a little steam, but even those are growing on me. Good good good.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Buy/Steal This Now!, February 13, 2007
The Coup is one of the best ways to get aquainted with the Bay, with Oakland. Listen to any of The Coup albums - Kill My Landlord, Genocide & Juice, Steal This Album, etc. - what we are essentially listening to is a soulful, funky, clever, bold, uncompromising, satirical, often downright funny indictment of the streets of Oakland, of the toiling, underprivileged, communities of the world, and, perhaps most importantly, of the oppressive political structure - capitalism - that keeps the poor, poor, and the rich, rich. What has made The Coup one of the best and most consistent rap groups to ever come from Oakland, what has made them a benchmark of "conscious hip hop" everywhere, is their unique ability to draw from the diversity of Oakland, and not fall into what I like to refer to as the clichéd, suburban, granolaism inherent in most socially aware rap music. Boots taps into the history of Oakland: the poverty, the violence, the drug game, the pimping, the politics, and produces a unique sound well outside of anything corny like this. Where granola rap sacrifices good music for a (self-proclaimed) good message, The Coup is able to do both: make good, catchy, often danceable music with a good message. Not just music you can learn from, but slap in the trunk too. Unfortunately, this is not entirely true of Pick A Bigger Weapon. I found myself captivated more by Boots' content than the songs themselves. The production and overall catchiness of this album isn't really as good as it should be and has been.
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