| 
					 ![[Triple Crown]](../coverart/mb_crown.jpg)  
					Mountain Brothers :: Triple Crown 
 Label: Babygrande Records 
					Author: Steve 'Flash' Juon
					 
					 
 
Standing alone atop a peak the size of Mt. Everest, the Mountain Brothers 
are the undisputed kings of Philadelphia's independent hip-hop scene.  It was 
a long hard climb to get there.  After 
years of paying dues with tapes out the trunk and demos for every label in 
the stable, Mountain Brothers thought they hit a peak in the mid 90's when 
they won Sprite's "Rhymes From the Mind" contest and got signed to Ruffhouse/
Columbia.  The peak was only a plateau though -- the "Paperchase" single 
they released burned up the underground but the label wasn't visionary enough 
to push them and '98 saw the relationship go down in flames.  Unfazed, the 
Mountain Brothers put out "Self Vol. 1" 
themselves through Pimpstrut Records, and climbed even higher thanks to an 
unexpected MTV indie label showcase featuring their video for "Galaxies."  In 
the years since, MB rapper/producer Chops has been blessing other indie rap 
acts like Bahamadia and Grand Agent with beats - leaving some to wonder if 
the Brothers had come down from the Mountain never to ascend again.
 
The long wait since '98 is now over; so have no fear, the Mountain Brothers 
are once again here.  "Triple Crown" perfectly surmises the way that Peril-L 
(pronounced parallel), Styles and Chops come together seperately to be one of 
the hardest hitting acts in rap's big leagues.  It's simple mathematics, 
you gotta love it.  Twenty-one MB's tracks kill off a lot of whack motherfuckers.  
DJ Jay-Ski spins and scratches the Rakim quote forming the hook of "Microphone 
Phenomenal," and Peril-L is not afraid to lay down the law on cornball MC's:
 
"Stand by the warpath, displayin raw math 
Meanwhile your corny A&R staff, had you carryin boxes 
I'm obnoxious, half Saggitarian 
Half-imaginarian, I'm laughin at you very intentionally 
[...] 
Practically I got a basement, slash cemetary 
Actively for body placement, that's temporary 
Most glorious legendary notorious emmissary 
Peril-L, rhyme oblivion's where I dwell in prime meridians"
 
Don't sleep on Styles though - not a gangster, but definitely a gentleman 
of the puglistic rap arts who keeps the punches coming:
 
"You know what you shouldn't oughta do?  Try to contest 
My rhyme texts is complex like Napoleon at Waterloo 
Idealogical, profile psychological 
When my squad drop a new record you need to cop a few 
Slay lots of dudes and that is why I'm phenomenal 
When I gets through you'll be wishin your moms swallowed you 
Mission impossible, sicker than when you caught the flu 
Like Tupac and Q, I'm droppin you, now I got the +Juice+"
 
There's no letting up on the follow-up track "I'm Talkin Bout You."  
This track is Styles chance to shine solo, and he gets even more vicious 
when he doesn't have to fear showing up his MB brethern:
 
"Styles Infinite, I'm steady pullin catses cards 
You think you're dope cause you're average in a below average squad 
Wanna diss but can't approach -- hidin like a phantom ghost 
An emperor in your mind and like no skills and no clothes 
My name is Styles, daily dissin whack bitches 
I tapped your mistress, yes I have pictures..."
 
Don't think Chops is just chilling in the background though.  On "Hostile 
Takeover" the deep voiced member of the trio again show-and-proves why he ranks 
with Diamond D and Celph Titled as one of the best rapping producers on the M-I-C:
 
"Restore the balance, time or talent, the rest got to go 
You're not hip-hop, you're a pop-ass ho that can't rock a show 
Make you confess face to face with the greats where you copped your flow 
Then what?  Put in on the news so your mom and pops can now 
Throw a public humiliation parade, death penalty 
for biters, sick writers, and so-called industry insiders 
A show of force, with no remorse, bring many changes 
like snipers that shoot you on sight for usin trendy phrases"
 
It almost goes without saying that the rest of the tracks are this well 
crafted lyrically, from the funked out solo "Peril-L Universe" to group cuts 
like the bouncy "Can't Miss" or the b-boy head-bop anthem "Yes Yes."  It's rare 
today in major OR indie rap for an album to keep getting better the 
further in you go, but from "Madness" featuring DJ Kwestion to the closing 
"Microphone Phenomenal" remix by DJ Cheapshot from Styles of Beyond, it's 
nothing but hotness.  The aptly named Beatnuts style track "Opin Wide" with 
DJ Jay-Ski won't fake the funk on a nasty dunk, it just dishes off to 
Chops for him to throw it down for delf in your FACE:
 
"Chops burn the house down, rebuild it from the ground under 
Run through your town, catch pounds and bounce like flubber 
Hotter than a Stevie Wonder summer; makin tracks 
to spank that ass like, 'Thank you can I please have another?' 
A number of hip-hop lovers listen to my disc and discover 
The shit I write tight like hip-huggers 
Bust the type of rhymes to make your eyes bug out, like Chris Tucker 
Face stunned 'The Color Purple' like your name was Danny Glover"
 
By giving each member of the Mountain Brothers time to shine on their own 
but keeping the group aesthetic in tact for the album as a whole the Mountain 
Brothers have expanded on the qualities that made "Self Vol. 1" 
an underground rap classic.  The only glaring mistake, if you could call it that, 
is wasting our time with a few unnecessary skits that just keep the listener from 
getting to dopeness like "The Roli Rho Show" and "Forest Gumption" a little longer.  
Once again, the MB's show that Illadelph is not the city to sleep on.  If you 
thought it was all about Schoolly D and The Roots, it's time to 
elevate your ears to the peaks of the Mountain Brothers.
 
Music Vibes: 8 of 10
Lyric Vibes: 9 of 10
TOTAL Vibes: 8.5 of 10
 
Originally posted: February 25, 2003 
source: www.RapReviews.com
 
 
 |