Jurassic 5 :: Quality Control
Label: Interscope
Author: Mike C.
"If we don't come with some new styles soon, we are all going to burn in
hell"
This bold statement appeared on the back of the Jurassic EP in
fine-print Public Enemy-style. Where PE chose to push the politic on
the cover graphics, for J5 it's all about new style. Their 1997 EP
cover presented a modified Prism Records jacket in denim blue and
old-school mustard flavor. The sound inside paid tribute to an even
older-school fashion in lyrics, yet looked forward musically. They've
caught criticisms and praise for the old-to-the-new, but the real issue
is about the style. Old school style: skipping backwards past the Big
Pimpin, over the Grimy Sewer, between the African Beads, beyond the
shell-toes, and smack into the days of the Cold Crush. Just lyrics and
a blacktop beat.
In 2000, Jurassic 5 take it back to the future with "Quality Control,"
the long-awaited full-length debut. A crew of MC's (Chali 2na, Zaakir,
Marc 7, and Akil) are joined by the requisite DJs Cut Chemist and
Nu-Mark. The effort by this Los Angeles group is to control not only
the quality of their own music, but that of the hip-hop world.
The lyricists share the mic like eastern bloc communist parties, or like
east coast block parties in '82. Tightly arranged rhyme trading isn't
just a tribute to the old school, it's an advancement for the whole
school of hip-hop. Clans, posses, crews, and cliks should take note of
how it's done, as the J5 keeps with the formula of group choruses, and
individual verses that give each MC a chance to shine. The vocal
arrangements are amazing there's no doubt the group had to get
dirty for all of this come off so clean. Chali 2na's certainly the most
distinctive with his strong voice holding down the lower end of the EQ.
Just check out the way he brings "Jurass Finish First" inhis voice
melds with the beat before he transitions his verses with Mark 7. The
subject matter throughout the album strays farther from a typical Bronx
block party affair (fortunately), as the lyric crew delves into the
realities of Hollywood life ("Lausd"), community
activism ("Contribution"), and the y2k treatment of the
basketball/mic-trading metaphor in "The Game." The lyrical content
isn't new of course, but it's the charisma and chemistry of the
"concrete schoolyard" style that makes it all worth listening to.
DJ Nu-Mark and the Cut Chemist elevate this collection of songs above a
typical old-school revival. It's these two that "come with the new
styles," that provide the backdrop to the classic rhyme patterns to make
us think twice about discounting the J5 as a tribute band. Though the
musical elements are the same (fat bassline, fat drums, fat samples),
Cut Chemist puts in work behind the boards to execute one of the finest
produced hip-hop album since Prince Paul worked with De La Soul. The
sound mix is on point, vivid samples galore, and the ambiguous cameos
that make you wonder if they're joking or not (Sean Lennon?! I hate Sean
Lennon!!) Cut Chemist gets a chance to flex and show off his deep record
collection with "Swing Set," an incredible melange of swing dance music
blended over hard beats. Nu-Mark crafts melodic rhythms that shine
throughout, while not overpowering the mic-traders#151;in fact his
sounds enhance the deliveries, as any great beat should. The production
is near perfection, reminding me of Def Leppard's glory days and anal
precision in arrangement, sound, and studio finesse.
So when does the album get to the "sex, drugs, bitches and money?" The
Jurassic 5 have skipped over that strain of hip-hop's evolution and
stuck to the basics of style. They've worked on elements of the music,
wasting no effort on trends that have come and gone over the 25 years of
the music's history. J5 is like that kid with the clean gearthe
one with the pressed jeans and cuffs. White shell-toes, logo'ed socks
that only he knows he's wearing. He takes his style too seriously at
times, and adjusts those cuffs around his laces every 10 steps. That's
J5. The attention to detail can be stifling, and you wish they'd screw
up a chorus at least once, if not only for the element of surprise. The
greater soul of the group lies in the Cut Chemist's turntable creations,
those incredibly complex DJ suites that bring the already organic
mixture of sound to vivid life.
The beats that he and Nu-Mark lay down takes those old-school styles and
makes it all fresh for the double-O, adding new styles for the next
generation to learn from and, inevitably, bite. I don't think this
team of hip-hop purists have to worry about burning in their
self-proclaimed hell, because "Quality Control" has proved that style is
all relative; new is old, and, for Jurassic 5, old is new.
Music Vibes: 10 of 10
Lyric Vibes: 7 of 10
TOTAL Vibes: 8.5 of 10
Originally posted: July 10, 2000
source: www.RapReviews.com
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