Kool Keith :: Matthew
Label: Threshold/Funky Ass
Author: Steve 'Flash' Juon
Kool Keith - the man, the legend, the porno star, the world's
most incomprehensible rapper. He's all of this and more, and
his reputation is taller than the Empire State Building. Keith
was wrecking records back in the 1980's when cats like Drag-On
and B.G. would have been in diapers.
To say Keith has an ego is like saying No Limit put out a
COUPLE records. On the opening track "F-U M.F." he's clearly
not having it from any of that "fake-ass wannabe hip-hop
shit." Let's cut right to the chase - Keith comes out and
says "Fuck the rap museum; I should be on the wall, next
to Run-D.M.C., between Public Enemy." Historically speaking,
he's right - few MC's have been in the industry as long or
been on as many records, solo or group. Keith scoffs at
his competitors throughout the song: "You been rappin for
20,000 years and you ain't got your fuckin deal yet?"
This kind of arrogance has worked to Kool Keith's advantage
on recent releases like "Dr. Dooom" and "Black Elvis" but
is not quite as satisfying here. This is not because it's
a rehashed topic - Keith has in fact rehashed many topics
through his lengthy career - but because his high self-opinion
does nothing for his BEATS. Keith's best work has
always been when someone else was behind his boards - from
Ultramagnetic MC's Ced Gee and TR Love to Dr. Octagon's
Dan 'The Automator' Nakamura. Keith makes some dope beats
but he also makes some BIZARRE beats that don't quite work.
"Operation Extortion" is an example of the best and worst
of Kool Keith's skills colliding. Keith's rhymes are
vicious and hilarious when he says, "Motherfuckers walkin
around tryin to be Bob Marley and Lenny Kravitz - that
scarf shit around everybody's head is for faggots," but
his beat on the track could only be compared to a three
year-old banging on a toy piano. "I Don't Believe You" has
the opposite problem: Keith's simple beat and bassline
have headnod appeal, but the song title is mentioned
every three seconds. "Youse a druglord - I don't believe
you; you pay your mortgage - I don't believe you." It's
not that Keith's observation isn't accurate - it's just
completely monotonous.
Keith keeps guest appearances to a handpicked minimum. Other than
Black Silver on "Sweet Unique Pete" and Bumpy on "Keith N Bumpy"
(no, not Freddie Foxxx) it's just 13 tracks of rapping and
4 skits. The album has wildly inconsistant
shit from the spacy futuristic "Diamonds" to
the mediocre like "Extravagant Traveler" and "Lived in the Projects."
Keith is always a little left of center mentally, which keeps even
the lesser tracks interesting, but only to a degree. Ironically,
the best cut may be "Baddest M.C.", where
Kool Keith is straight up bragging about his money and status.
Sometimes the old school styles work the best. Keith does have to
be dogged for one line in this song though: "Forget the internet
and the website, that's no way to step right." Et tu,
Kool-Keith.com?? (EDITOR'S NOTE:
Ironically this website no longer exists.)
Keith's reputation will no doubt keep a solid fanbase of
loyal buyers (this reviewer included) checking for this
album, but I'm already fiending for the last one and waiting
for the next one. Keith doesn't strike platinum or gold
everytime; so on this one he's batting .250 instead of
his normal .300 range. Hopefully the slump is temporary.
Music Vibes: 5 of 10
Lyric Vibes: 6 of 10
TOTAL Vibes: 5.5 of 10
Originally posted: August 1, 2000
source: www.RapReviews.com
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