|
|
|
|
|
producer: the
alchemist, nucleus, evidence, kemo, joey chavez, rob
the viking, seanski, roger swan.
|
|
guests: evidence,
chali 2na, dj revolution, buc fifty, planet asia, dj
babu, son doobie, moka only, iriscience, others.
|
| year of release:
2001 |
| rating |
| click
for explanation |
|
|
| tracklisting |
| 1. Intro |
| 2. Killing Spree |
| 3. Full Contact feat.
Evidence, Chali 2na |
| 4. Take It Back feat.
DJ Revolution |
| 5. RPM feat. Iriscience,
DJ Babu |
| 6. Bad Dreams |
| 7. Camouflage feat.
DJ Revolution |
| 8. Poker Face feat.
Buc Fifty |
| 9. Deep End |
| 10. Anthrax Island |
| 11. Snake Bite feat.
Rattlesnake Jones, Chris Guy |
| 12. Total Package
feat. Planet Asia, DJ Revolution |
| 13. The Reflection |
| 14. Ventilate |
| 15. Burns And Scars
feat. Son Doobie |
| 16. Dark Riders feat.
Buc Fifty |
| 17. Fuel Injected
feat. Moka Only |
| 18. High Road |
|
|
 |
| Bad
Dreams |
|
There can be much said
about the Swollen Members, but the sentence: 'they are
darn good' has to be included in the description. And
that's odd enough. It's fair to say that Madchild and
Prevail are not the most gifted emcees on this planet,
however, they are by far not the worst too. So there
needs to be a different explanation why these Canadian
fellers have bumrushed themselves in the global hip
hop consciousness. Maybe, the explanation can be boiled
down to beats. As for some benefiting reason, the Swollen
Members accomplish to pick beats that are not necessarily
ground breaking, while most of the time straying away
from the norm. And they are fuckin' banging. But that
would not be enough though, and so we gotta expand our
reasoning: Prev' and Mad' also have an incredible chemistry
and are able to work the beats, to ride them, to flow
over them, with a effortlessness that's only remotely
sounding like they are thoroughly uninterested in the
whole thing. And as a result, every line they say sounds
like a quotable to memorize. Hence it's the sum of these
things, that make the Swollen Members as good as they
are.
|
|
Giving us their second
album now, we are quite anxious to get more, as the
pre-released 12"es were all promising. Once more those
tracks can be found on here again, namely "Dark
Riders", "Camouflage"
and "Deep End",
while others are actually missing, like "Temptation"
and "Members Only". That still leaves us with 15 new
tracks (plus one intro) that are to be discovered and
heard. And once you hear the "Intro",
you know that the Swollen Members mean business. As
this is some special forces recruitment, that's using
the same sounds as the track coming on immediately after,
the Nucleus produced "Killing
Spree". It is giving us the strict formula,
with slicing words, over an equally chopping beat.
|
|
The lyrics by Prev'
and Mad' are a strange mixture of military commands,
insane lunatic's rambling, punchlines, and strangeness
in sentences. They also spit their words with a rather
talking flow, maybe making the maniac impression even
stronger. However, on "Full
Contact" the two team up with Evidence (on
the beat and mic) and Chili 2na, and this is going for
the more battling (and maybe that could be a connecting
umbrella the lyrical content could be positioned under),
with Madchild saying "your so wack, even your yes man
has suggestions". This album is throughout thick with
guest appearance, as DJ Revolution is added to "Take
It Back". We however are initially attracted
to this because Rob The Viking produced the beat, and
ever since we saw him being named the producer of "Invigorating"
(an LMNO cut), we are checking everything this cat is
doing. On this track he is putting together a retro-bouncy
beat, that obviously fits the topic, with Mad' mentioning
"introducing Madchild, ladies And gentlemen / let's
have a round of applause for adrenaline". And things
are kept on the bounce tip, as Nucleus is putting some
fire under the style and offers "RPM",
that is then used by Iriscience (who claims that they
are "some of the illest on slipmats") as a guest, with
DJ Babu also lending his helping hand's product to the
cut.
|
|
The title track "Bad
Dreams" is then showcasing the depressive
persona's of our Members, as we are somewhat discussing
the sleeping habits. The track suffers from a rather
lengthy chorus, while the piano based Alchemist production,
as well as the sound effects are making the topic grippingly
visible. What then leads us to "Camouflage",
once more with DJ Revolution on the team, and featuring
a very untypical Evidence production, what in this case
means, that's it's beneficially untypical. We shall
continue, as we've heard this before, and we get "Poker
Face" featuring Buc Fifty and featuring another
Rob beat. The quirky voice emcee is opening the track,
but somehow you can feel the other two cats linger in
the back in a threatening manner, and you'd never dare
to tell 'em not to step to the mic. Prev' then sounds
rather anxious, with his flow and voice adapting to
Buc's tongue. The incredible previously released "Deep
End" comes on next, and the beat is credited
to Seanski, and once more it's a name that we will keep
in mind.
|
|
The somewhat unapt (in
these days) titled "Anthrax
Island" gives us more Nucleas baps, and gives
us very forward pacing emcees, what then does a 180°
turn for "Snake Bite",
a cut that features very unnecessary crooning, and a
rather romantic guitar. Rattlesnake Jones and Chris
Guy are called to complete the track, with Rob and Roger
Swan sharing the production duties. Now, the crooning
is unnecessary as it's softening up the whole Swollen
stance, and that just doesn't work too properly. Much
better is the going for the head nodding "Total
Package", that gives us more Evidence and
Revolution, but also Planet Asia. Machild is spitting
his 'plastic explosive' rhymes, that have us find him
over the top violent, in super hero circumstances. Showing
that we are not the only ones that keep Rob in high
regard is "The Reflection",
where he's given the chore to do something instrumental,
with the other cats eyes closed gathering strengths
for further attacks. Like "Ventilate",
that is giving us Prev' and Mad' go at each other, throwing
all kinds of frustrations about the twosome at each
other. Interestingly enough Madchild 'wins' the argument
at the end though.
|
|
The Members dig Son
Doobie out the limbo, who teamed up with them before
on "Committed". The name of the game this time around
is "Burns And Scars"
and with the beat by Rob it appears to be a forward
pacing track. The same can be said about the previously
released "Dark Riders",
that is done by The Alchemist. Madchild is "here's a
guarantee, death is instantaneous / mercilessly we maim
the miscellaneous / conquering my challenges by reaching
within / then Madchild leaves with the screech of the
wind", while Buc Fifty is handling the chorus. "Fuel
Injected" features one of the most recognizable
samples previously used by DJ Shadow, and the way it
is hooked up by rascal Kemo, and used here is straight
up dope. The chorus however, done by Moka Only, is not
to the tracks full well being. Moka is doing something
a little too singing, and it sounds good, but would
have been better fitted on a smoother song. And the
last credited song once more belongs to Rob The Viking
and what he puts together is one incredible piece, called
"High Road". Yes,
even the keyboard piano is made to sound dope, and the
spiritual and deep soundscape, makes Prev' and Madchild
get quieter and get respectfully melancholic and in
Prev's case that sounds something like "I realized that
the things I don't need are the things I don't deserve
/ so I try to live simply in a complicated world".
|
|
There's a hidden track
coming on after a few moments of silence. And it's an
alternative version of "Take
It Back". However, even without it we would
have been very pleased with this album, that is giving
us a bundle of incredible tracks, along with very few
tracks that are lagging a little back. That of course
is a statement about a style that can't be considered
to be universal, and that's a fair statement. The lyrical
content, and the hard slicing beats are specialized
enough to lack a broader appeal. But maybe that's exactly
what makes them so good.
|
| review:
tadah |
|