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					 ![[All of the Above]](../coverart/jlive_above.jpg)  
					J-Live :: All of the Above 
 Label: Coup d'Etat Entertainment 
					Author: Steve 'Flash' Juon
					 
					 
 
There are few names that carry as much credibility among hardcore hip-hop 
purists as J-Live.  Live has the ultimate underground trifecta: a syrupy 
golden voice that flows rhymes like the Nile, beloved underground singles 
like "Braggin' Writes" and "Them That's Not," and a SIMPLY STELLAR 
debut album which got shelved 
as the byproduct of a bad record deal gone worse.  Could a rapper possibly 
have more credibility in the bank than J-Live does?  It's hard to imagine.
 
To be sure, J-Live is not the first hero of underground rap who fell victim 
to Industry Rule #4,080.  The difference here is that J-Live is not content 
to be like a lot of other rappers who come up in, "Say - whatever happened 
to...?" conversations.  The easy way out would be for J to fold up and say, 
"Fuck the music business, it's not worth it," but instead he's decided to 
take another stab at it with the album "All of the Above."  J explains this 
decision right from jump on the inside jacket of his album: "Basically, I've 
got a bunch of stuff on my mind.  I'm just trying to put as much of it on record 
as you can stand at one time."
 
Too modest J.  What most fans of beats and rhymes CAN'T stand is how 
lesser MC's masquerade as lyrical champions with half of J-Live's lyric 
writing ability and a third of his charisma and skill.  Listening to J-Live 
is never a dssapointment or more than you can stand, and he proves this 
right from the start on the witty "First Things First."  If you only 
listened to the first 163 seconds you might mistake this for an intro or 
a skit, but J-Live's not wasting this opportunity to set the record straight 
with his opening salvo in round two of his war on mediocrity:
 
"First things first, I just - got through, goin through 
this ordeal, dealin with deals, you know the deal 
I've dealt with, bein dealt dirty, downsized 
and duped, done double-paid my dues, for real 
I just - know today's degree, C lesson 
Not nowadays, can a record label fool me 
So the understanding'll be 'The Best Part' 
No need to guess how this rocky road was meant to be"
 
With his introduction out of the way, J ups the ante a notch higher with 
the Joe Money produced jam "How Real it Is."  The song title is both the 
question and the answer for J, who starts out with a deceptively simple 
analogy of the world as a video game:
 
"Where the quarter only gives you one life 
So you better push the buttons just right (welcome to my world) 
Where any given second, anybody can get it 
You better hold on tight.. 
.. cause life can take a turn for the worse 
and have you switchin from the Coupe to the hearse 
You better peep this verse; the streets ain't no joke 
but maaaan, the sidewalks might get you first 
So wherever you rest, you better don't sleep 
It's like Denzel said - you could either be a wolf or a sheep 
And that even criminology; I'm talkin bout 
the everyday 9 to 5 people STILL gotta fight the evil 
You could ride the fast lane or the train 
The illest weapon you could load ain't your 9 boy, load your brain"
 
It's tempting to infinitely quote J-Live's manuscripts, as each lyric 
reveals both pearls of wisdom and a sardonic wit that chuckles at the 
struggles of life while holding up hope for better days.  The first 
single "Satisfied?" epitomizes this paradox with a parable about the 
World Trade Center: "Aiyyo the ants still steal/the anthrax got my 
Old Earth wearin a mask and gloves to get her mail/I know an Older God 
that lost 12 close peeps on 9-1-1/while you kickin out punchlines and 
puns."  You might think J was bitter and hardened if you judged by 
these lines, but he's just a battle-weary veteran with the wisdom 
to know that no matter what people say some things never change:
 
"But now it's all about, NYPD caps and pentagon bumper stickers 
but yo - you're still a nigga 
It ain't right them cops and them firemen died 
That shit is real tragic but it damn sure ain't magic 
It won't make the brutality dissappear 
It won't pull equality from behind your ear 
It won't make a difference in a two party country 
if the President cheats, to win another four years 
Now don't get me wrong, there's no place I'd rather be 
The grass ain't greener on the other genocide 
But tell Huey Freeman don't forget to cut the lawn and 
uproot the weeds, cause I'm not satisfied"
 
Lest you got the wrong impression, J-Live is not this serious on 
every single note - he's serious about his skills but that also means 
he can seriously flip the script, as he does on the self-explanatory 
AND self-produced "MCee," where even he has to step back and 
ask, "Can you believe I do this shit for a living?"  With braggadocious 
quips like, "It's ill cause my role models are my peers now/and my 
thoughts'll be in your ears for years now," it's only hard to believe he 
hasn't made a BETTER living at it to date.  As such you'll enjoy 
the double entendre of his ode to womanly pleasures on the Joe Money 
gem "Like This Anna" or his equally sharp pianos and snares on 
the quintessential "One For the Griot" where J-Live spits a verse 
and then keeps changing the ending to the story in his rhyme at 
the insistence of a disbelieving listener.
 
For those who heard his discontinued full-length debut, don't 
expect anybody as big as DJ Premier to show up with beats this time.  
The most significant outside producer to bless tracks is DJ Spinna on 
the title track, "Do That Shit" and "All In Together Now."  With fresh 
beats by J and Joe Money they don't NEED the extra big name help.  
When you the haunting melody of "Nights Like This" you know the 
blessings are in full effect, but it gets even iller on J-Live's 
self-produced "The 4th 3rd" though - a song in which J speaks of 
a woman who obviously is everything a man could ever ask for:
 
"The way I lived for you was as if I'd die with you 
Cause not a moment I spent witchu was artificial 
The plan from the dome was to build a home witchu 
Forever had a space in my heart, I'd roam witchu 
Hypothetical dreams conjured when I met you 
See years grew between us and still I can't forget you 
Regrettin how I ever let you, let me, let you 
escape fool's paradise, runnin from a paradox 
Livin like a pair of ducks but we're different flocks 
With different destinations our ships remain docked 
Temporary, but the feelings that I harbored still weighed 
in the holy waters that made our sweet lemonade 
Too dumb to persist, too smart to persuade 
Too heavy to push aside, and too strong to stay 
Too hard to work but so easy to play 
like chopsticks but our picks slipped away 
Leavin me to recollect day by day 
and take solace in the words Bill say: 
Memories take you back.. to the good times.. 
when it's over.. and the sad times disappear.."
 
The mark of a brilliant and captivating storyteller is when every 
word leaves you hanging on for the next, and in this respect there 
is no question J is as Live as they come.  That's why even after 
"Happy Belated" you'll be hanging on for the bonus tracks "3 out 
of 7" featuring Asheru and El Da Sensai and "The Lyricist" - a 
very aptly named track to close out this album.  J-Live takes 
lyricism back to the day when good writing and good delivery meant 
more than a good sample to rap over or a good guest to sing on the 
hook.  For every reason that "The Best Part" failed, chalk up a 
reason to hate the music industry - but then turn around and give 
thanks that they got it right this time on "All of the Above."  
Suffering only by comparison to his legendary unreleased 
classic, this is in all other respects a brilliant album miles 
above and beyond what any of his contemporaries are doing now 
OR far into the foreseeable future.
 
Music Vibes: 8 of 10
Lyric Vibes: 10 of 10
TOTAL Vibes: 9 of 10
 
Originally posted: March 26, 2002 
source: www.RapReviews.com
 
 
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