Rating:
At the risk of sounding like one of those kids who watches "The O.C.", Atmosphere was always for those moments when a woman ripped your heart out, then punched you in the neck. I won't say "the hip-hop Death Cab," but you get the picture. Nothing wrong with the raw sadness and fury Slug conjured, but you weren't exactly throwin' your sets up for Minneapolis' finest. I always put that Lucy Ford record underneath the M.O.P. album in the crate. So the abandonment of that form here, that "guilty pleasure," hurts my feelings. Mr. Heartache, where you at? In its place, I guess, is the sap of another tree: Nostalgia.
Nothing can illuminate the pomp and circumstance of You Can't
Imagine better than this couplet from "Watch Out": "When I was younger, I
wanted to be LL Cool J/ But then he started makin' records for the girls and
shit/ So I ripped up the Kangol and threw it away." Uh, what? Forgetting
that's just a wack rhyme for a moment, anyone who's been to an Atmosphere
concert surely knows the kind of estrogen jam they can be. Even worse than
the desertion, though, is that this record lacks any
growth or good humor. Which is a shame because their previous album, Seven's
Travels, while flawed, started to find a balance (wink) between the
political leanings that have crept into Slug's raps with his wounded-puppy raps.
This is not to say the album's a mess. Like Blackalicious' recent The
Craft, it displays a real hard-earned competency, something a decade
of recording together will get you. But the lyrics lack transcendence or
resonance. Conversely, producer Ant's production is full and springy. His
growth has never been in question, exploding with complicated chops and
orchestrations on every album. Whether flipping operettas on "Say Hey There"
or dropping pianos from five floors up on "Musical Chairs" he's got sundry
abilities. The songs here are melded beautifully, making the eventual
instrumental wax a must-cop. In all honesty, I never understood why Ant
wasn't lacing dudes like Freeway and Young Buck years ago. He could do it.
There are exceptions as the album moves, like "Angelface" which quivers with
panging guitars and (gasp) a politically snarky jab at Uncle Sam, masked as
the kind of love letter this dude used to kill something lovely five years
ago. "Pour Me Another" oozes barfly grease. And "Little Man" is pretty and
loopy. On it Slug says "I'm over 30, can't maintain relations/ All these
women wanna hurt me/ And I just don't have the patience." This is not
something you hear much on a rap record. It's refreshing. Of course, if you
want to be a dick about it, Juelz Santana murdered the same sample used on
"Little Man" on the first Diplomats album back in 2003 without sacrificing
his diary entry. Pity.
On their fifth proper, the attempts to merge Slug's emotionally aware,
sneering theatrics with the sort of nostalgia-4-cheap malarkey that passes
for "conscious" hip-hop these days is a crashing failure. Like Edan and
Little Brother's reminiscent melancholy from this year, listening to Slug
disregard hip-hop's sonic development is like stuffing a chloroform-soaked
Shelltoe in your mouth. Don't you know we rockin' Bapes these days, mang?
Most Read Record Reviews
- Portishead: Third
- M83: Saturdays=Youth
- Weezer: Weezer (The Red Album)
- Coldplay: Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends
- Scarlett Johansson: Anywhere I Lay My Head
- Lil Wayne: Tha Carter III
- Death Cab for Cutie: Narrow Stairs
- Fleet Foxes: Fleet Foxes
- No Age: Nouns
- Cut Copy: In Ghost Colours
- Vampire Weekend: Vampire Weekend
- Sigur Rós: Með suð í eyrum við spilum endalaust
- Girl Talk: Feed the Animals
- Beck: Modern Guilt
- Bonnie "Prince" Billy: Lie Down in the Light
- My Morning Jacket : Evil Urges
- Flight of the Conchords: Flight of the Conchords
- Radiohead: The Best Of / The Best Of [Special Edition]
- Tapes 'n Tapes: Walk It Off
- Madonna: Hard Candy
- Wolf Parade: At Mount Zoomer
- Nine Inch Nails: The Slip
- Titus Andronicus: The Airing of Grievances
- Spiritualized: Songs in A&E
- Sun Kil Moon / Mark Kozelek: April / Nights
- Air France: No Way Down EP
- Spoon: Don't You Evah EP
- The Roots: Rising Down
- Islands: Arm's Way
- The National: The Virginia EP
- Crystal Antlers: EP
- Muse: H.A.A.R.P.
- Animal Collective: Water Curses EP
- Fuck Buttons: Street Horrrsing
- N.E.R.D.: Seeing Sounds
- Boris: Smile
- The Last Shadow Puppets: The Age of the Understatement
- HEALTH: DISCO
- Santogold: Santogold
- Liz Phair: Exile in Guyville (15th Anniversary)
- The Replacements: Sorry Ma, Forgot to Take Out the Trash / Stink / Hootenanny / Let It Be
- Frightened Rabbit: Midnight Organ Fight
- The Cool Kids: The Bake Sale EP
- The Notwist: The Devil, You + Me
- Silver Jews: Lookout Mountain, Lookout Sea
- Atmosphere: When Life Gives You Lemons, You Paint That Shit Gold
- The Kooks: Konk
- Mates of State: Re-Arrange Us
- Free Kitten: Inherit
- Tokyo Police Club: Elephant Shell
