| ![[The Sickness, Part One]](../coverart/pa_sick.jpg)  Planet Asia :: The Sickness, Part One   Copter Records
 Author: Steve 'Flash' Juon
 
 Straight outta Fresno, crazy motherfucker named Asia.  From the gang best known 
as Cali Agents.  Even better when solo though, and when he hauls off, his lyrical 
flow will blast your drawers off.  If you've followed his career from the late 90's 
through 2004's "The Grand Opening," you already 
know Asia is one of the most underrated MC's in the business today.  Asia fiends 
for microphones like Rakim, but rocks with a voice that often sounds kin to GZA.  
The similarity to Wu-Tang's cerebral assassin doesn't end there - Asia is deadly 
serious about his lyrical craft.  The fact his newest release is called "The Sickness, 
Part One" ought to strike fear into lesser MC's everywhere, since two parts together 
might overthrow hip-hop from West coast to East coast and all points beyond.
 
Before getting too far ahead of ourselves though, one has to know whether Asia came correct 
with his first section.  Ice Cube was once just as feared in hip-hop, but after 
releasing two volumes of War & 
Peace the once dominant California king 
found himself better suited to acting in Hollywood.  Rap historians can debate about 
whether or not he truly fell off, but there hasn't been a full album of new music since.  
In case you thought this review was going nowhere with all the allusions to N.W.A., 
particularly since Asia spits a completely different style more akin to rap cyphers 
than drivebys in South Central, it's Asia himself who put it out there on "The Sickness" 
by doing a song called "Gangsta, Gangsta."  What's gangsta to Asia though?
 
"Fuck the whole establishment, I got the kids in my back pocketFuck a pagan Jesus, worship the black prophets
 With that knowledge I can stack dollars
 And act Midas when I tap wallets, to give it back the hardest
 Now that's gangsta nigga, face it
 Find me in a spaceship, with them true blue paper getters
 With an eighth and some liquor, to the face I'm official
 To your face I might diss you, on my waist is a pistol
 Malcolm X, Marcus Garvey, Martin Luther King - it's gangsta gangsta
 Gangsta gangsta"
 
That's what type of shit Asia is on.  Intelligent and articulate, thinking about the 
future, but determined to get his hustle on and survive in the here and now.  Combine 
Planet Asia with the right beats and you can feel an earthquake shake from both the 
reverberating bass and the heads who scatter in his wake, best described on "Gold 
Chain General" by the man himself: "Gold Chain general, with Murder Dog interviews/your 
whole album, couldn't fuck with my interludes/Dude, I'm like a monster, boy/young 
independent black entrepeneur."
 
With everything that Asia has going for 
him as a brash smooth flowing West coast rap don, there's still a problem with "The 
Sickness, Part One."  When you proclaim that someone's whole album couldn't fuck with 
your own interludes, you'd better back it up with the rhymes AND the beats.  
Not only do a lot of Asia's tracks miss the musical mark, some of them sound like 
weak rip-offs of other people's styles.  "Fight to the Flo" featuring Rasco should 
have been a great combination, but it's not just the song title that seems borrowed 
from the Dirty South.  It's half David Banner and half Three 6 Mafia, and not the 
better parts of either's style.  "I Do This" has some chopped up synthetic horns 
in the breaks, which would be bad enough if the weak drum track wasn't some thin hand 
claps mixed with a bass that growls like a dog on chemotherapy for lung cancer.  Speaking 
of dogs, the only thing "Murder Time" proves is that Asia needs to leave reggae riddims 
and whack chattas like Madd Dogg the hell alone.  Asia's speedy flow on the second verse 
is proficient enough to fuck with Twista in a rap battle, but the song is way too 
irritating on the whole to check it more than once.
 
Unfortunately a mixture of acceptable beats with mediocre ones isn't the sole 
problem with "The Sickness."  On the last album Asia fucked with a variety of high 
quality guests whose caliber was equal to his own from Ghostface Killah to Goapele.  
On his latest release most of Asia's guests are unknowns to me and quite possibly 
in Fresno.  I recognize that's part of Asia's hustle since he's clearly trying to 
establish a "Gold Chain" imprint of some sort and they'll probably form the roster, 
but they'd have been better served on a compilation of their own instead of diluting 
the amount of Asia found on his own release.  Things are okay through the first 
six tracks, but then feces hits the rotary blade.  I'm not sure which one is Killa 
Ben and which one is Mitchy Slick, but one sounds like a Killarmy reject and the 
other couldn't hang with Yukmouth on his worst day.  "Baby Food" is one of the album's 
better tracks, but instead of three verses of Asia he has to share billing with 
Sav Skills and Tri State.  In fact other than Rasco the only guest of any quality 
to be found on the whole project is Moka Only, who blesses "Time After Time" nicely 
over an Architect beat:
 
"I come at you on a personal levelSome regular, every day shit, my life's another kettle of fish
 altogether and this reflects in me and the tunes we create
 Under moons let me get me that respect that been missin
 Select your position to be in
 I'm stuck in ninety-two like a museum
 On some cool Grand Pu', Brand Nubian shit too
 But forward to the future, let me do what I do"
 
Planet Asia is still bar none one of the best in the industry when he's presented 
correctly, but it's possible that on "The Sickness, Part One" he forgot to promote 
himself and spent too much time spreading the wealth.  Such generosity is rare in 
hip-hop these days and to be commended in general, but that doesn't necessarily make 
for a hot album.  If Asia will go back to his roots and focus on putting himself 
over instead of lesser MC's for "Part Two" his mistakes here will soon be forgotten.
 
Music Vibes: 6 of 10
Lyric Vibes: 7 of 10
TOTAL Vibes: 6.5 of 10
 
Originally posted: January 31, 2006source: www.RapReviews.com
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