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					 ![[Feedback]](../coverart/j5_feedback.jpg)  
					Jurassic 5 :: Feedback 
 Interscope Records 
					Author: Steve 'Flash' Juon
 
					 
					 
In broad pop culture usage the word "Jurassic" has come to mean something 
incredibly ancient; hundreds of millions of years old in the history of 
this planet we call Earth. This is in part due to the popular film "Jurassic 
Park," which theorized that long-extinct dinosaurs could be resurrected 
through harvesting fossilized DNA. Besides being scientifically unfeasible 
the name itself was a misnomer as many of the dinosaurs featured in the film 
were from the Cretaceous period of Earth's history, not the Jurassic. 
Nevertheless the usage of the term stuck and in some cases became a badge 
of pride for people who eschewed modern trends over older forms. If the 
saying "everything old is new again" holds weight it's no surprise to find 
some people would rather play Atari 2600 and listen to Fat Boys records 
than buy an X-Box 360 and get the latest Lloyd Banks CD. Sounds ludicrous? 
Well here's something to consider - that 25 year old Atari you've got 
gathering dust in the closet still works, but in 5 years time that new 
X-Box with all the polygons and high speed processing won't. Hell it might 
not even take five months before it becomes a fossil in its own right.
Jurassic 5 is also something of a misnomer for the popular hip-hop group 
from Los Angeles, California. While the usage was intended to show they 
were in some ways a throwback to simpler times, there's nothing inherently 
simple about their music or rhymes. Jurassic 5 actually bridges the era 
between the Atari 2600 and the X-Box 360 by combining the old school values 
of a crew of MC's and DJ's banded together for one common cause with today's 
freshest beats and most up-to-date topics and punchlines. Even the "5" in 
their name was somewhat misleading - for a time the group was a six man crew 
featuring DJ's Nu-Mark and Cut Chemist side by side with the rappers 
Zaakir, Marc 7, Akil and Chali 2na. Chemist recently and amicably parted 
ways with the group to pursue his own projects, so at the present time they 
are a true Jurassic 5 in number. One could argue though that the entire 
Dave Matthews Band became an unofficial sixth member on the first single 
from their new album "Feedback," a swinging upbeat song called 
"Work it Out":
 
Marc 7: "It's not appealin as you truly speak your feelings 
I be lookin at the ceilin, so concealin 
I shoulda put my heart on the table 
Knowin I was good and able but instead I fed your fables 
If I could have you back best believe it'd be forever 
Cause each and every day you would hear those four letters"
 
Chali 2na: "These are different times but we feel the same pains 
The blood of mankind's runnin through the same veins 
We write to make it right, some would say remain tame 
Same crimes even though the names changed 
And we like different minds workin off the same brain 
Passengers on different cars steppin off the same train"
 
While a fine song in its own right "Work it Out" is not necessarily 
emblematic of "Feedback" as a whole. Jurassic 5 has experienced some 
crossover pop success in the past, but "Work it Out" is by far their 
most pop-oriented song to date. That's not a knock - it's just a fact. 
They need to get their name back in the public eye given it's been a 
four year layoff since "Power 
in Numbers" was released, and an upbeat song with the Dave Matthews 
Band is certainly the way to do it. On the Nu-Mark produced opener 
"Back 4 U" though, the group comes much harder with a song which mixes 
live concert footage with tight raps and samples from "Beat Box" by 
Art of Noise. The piano notes are accessible, but not wishy-washy or 
soft, an attitude emphasized by Chali 2na with the words "Feel sorry 
for those who bystand innocently [..] demolished every nerd in my 
path, the verbal giraffe." J5 even get a little crunk on the Salaam 
Remi produced "Radio," not a sound you'd necessarily expect from them 
but one which they carry off with able skill. Things get tropical 
on Scott Storch's "Brown Girl (Suga Plum)," go straight 70's funk 
on the Curtis Mayfield laced "Gotta Understand," and then Nu-Mark 
brings it back to the early 1980's styles they're inspired by on "In 
the House."
 
If you noticed that the previous paragraph ran down the first five 
tracks of "Feedback" in sequential order, it's not a coincidence. Some 
albums inspire you to skip around from track to track trying to find 
the beats or rhymes you like best, but "Feedback" is not a rap buffet. 
It's more like a restaurant that serves you a fine multi-course meal - 
some dishes are large and others are small but they're all so tasty 
you wouldn't want to skip over any of them. Some flavors may seem a 
little exotic, such as whistling hook and stripped down layering of 
Salaam Remi's "Get it Together," but once you have a taste you'll wish 
the flavor lasted longer and want more as soon as it's gone. Sure you 
could go back and get another helping, but stick with the theme here 
and move on to the next dish! Nu-Mark's "Future Sound" is so jazzy 
and uplifting that waiting any longer to hear it would be a mistake. 
When the words "I'm one of the last cats, puttin the flavor back 
into rap" hit your ear, you'll know this was not a taste to waste.
 
I've tried awfully hard to find a song to say wasn't worth 
listening to on this CD, but even the "J Resume (Skit)" was an 
entertaining break between tracks. In fact the only downside to 
"Feedback" is that by the time you reach the swinging latino rhythms 
of the instrumental finale "Canto de Ossanha" 52 minutes of hip-hop 
soul just won't seem like enough. "Feedback" is another term that 
gets thrown around with a lot of different meanings - sometimes it's 
the noise that prevents a response, and sometimes it's a request to 
GET a response. In J5's case "Feedback" is definitely the latter, and 
the response they'll get is both appreciation from their long-time 
fans and cultivation of a new group who realize there's nothing 
fossilized about this West coast quinquervirate of dopeness.
 
Music Vibes: 9 of 10
Lyric Vibes: 9 of 10
TOTAL Vibes: 9 of 10
 
Originally posted: July 25, 2006 
source: www.RapReviews.com
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