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					Canibus :: For Whom the Beat Tolls Mic Club Music/101 Distribution 
					Author: Steve 'Flash' Juon
					 
					 
There will be no producers listed in this review. These songs could have been produced by 
Stoupe the Enemy of Mankind, DJ Premier, Alchemist or Chief Xcel for all I know. There will be 
no commentary on the thickness of the liner notes, no discussion of the quality of the artwork, 
no examination of whether the back cover maintains the theme presented on the front. Loyal 
RapReviews.com loyal readers (and we appreciate all of you) have been asking the same question 
for weeks now: "Where is the new Canibus review?" This is another one of those curious cases 
where the album that should have been at the top of our list was the least available. Many 
sources insisted this album had been out ever since the first week of June, but every store 
I went to had no copies available or insisted it was on order. With no promotional copy from 
the artist or label available, and no purchasable copy available either, there was little to 
nothing I could do despite the overwhelming demand for this review.
 
I should have just looked for it on iTunes all along. For $9.99 I now have a digital download, which I can at my 
convenience burn to a CD if I want to play it in the whip or my home stereo. This is the first 
Canibus album I've ever owned without a plastic tray to peel the shrinkwrap off of, but if there 
was ever an appropriate rapper to be distributed digitally it's the Vitruvian CanMan, the rapper 
who a decade ago famously said that he walked on the surface of the sun, just looking for shade. 
As one of the most futuristic lyrical freestylers to ever transition from ripping shows to 
recording albums, has any rapper alive been more prepared to go totally digital? This feels right. 
Canibus albums should have been online only purchases all along. Stripped of a physical product 
and presence, Canibus can ask "For Whom the Beat Tolls" and hear the echo reverberate across the 
digital bitstream. The ping comes back in milliseconds with the answer - the beat tolls for him, 
the hip-hop icon, the self-described "Poet Laureate Infinity":
 
"Don't be upset with Canibus yet, the kids just want respect 
You been a success but what do he get? 
Divine design, a miracle of metallurgy 
Every clergy member from Mecca who heard of me worshipped me 
I got away nervously, talked about it purposefully 
Next time I see it, it's gonna have a word with me 
The biological chemical emergency 
I purchase the beat; I resumed PsyOps on the enemy 
Mix the blood so it don't coagulate 
The sex magic won't work if the bitch masturbates 
Nobody can hold me back, my flow bloviates into a spiritual shape 
A capsule in space, no emcee could rhyme like this, there's no challenge 
His Poet Laureate should pontificates balance 
Telencephalon olfactory lobes I had to practice 
When a woman has her period I smell it on the mattress 
Advanced step in innovative mobility 
Most MC's try to clone me lyrically 
They can't battle me so they'd rather embarrass me 
But I need a volunteer, do I have any? 
The NASA contractor with a satchel of answers 
I passed up the Nobel Peace Prize for my passion 
Most of you will never understand what I mean"
 
Perhaps not but conceptually I understand what Canibus tried to do with this song - get people 
amped up about "the greatest rhyme of all time" by creating a song with five different layers of 
vocal tracks. Obviously listening to all five of them at once would be confusing as hell so on 
his website you could manipulate a mixer to hear as many at 
one time as you could handle. Released in a more conventional format we're given the third and 
the fourth layer of that track; either one being an 11 minute epic opus of lyrical creativity. 
The sales pitch for buying "For Whom the Beat Tolls" in its entirety is clever even by clever's 
own standards - if you buy the song one track at a time you won't get EITHER of 
these incredible songs. Only by purchasing the entire album in one shot as one download do you 
get these "album only" songs from iTunes, and ironically they are worth the purchase price alone. 
That's not to say Canibus doesn't have other examples of impressive lyrical dexterity and complexity. 
Having long since shed the tag of being a freestyle only MC who couldn't write narrative raps, 
songs like "Magnum Innominandum" shouldn't come as a surprise to anyone these days:
 
"I was taught my heart was my brain in my past life 
I was thrashed in a fight over my passion for the mic 
Risked the ultimate sacrifice to rhyme, askin' Christ why? 
He replied; "Passions like mine have a price" 
They will grab you if you grab the mic 
Try to squeeze the life from you, take away your life 
There's only one way to fight 
Zero gravity device, turn it on 
Impale them on stalactites and stalagmites, alright? 
I was hyped; he told me that every word I recite 
Symbolically represents the whole world's kryptonite 
Includin; but not limited to spittin' in the booth 
Spit the truth; tell the leadership to listen to the troops 
The leadership bleeds blue, we bleed red 
In the end the only thing we can agree on is death 
I beg you to get it together 
To truly be clever you gotta be able to think ahead and remember 
Cause most of us have forgotten where we came from 
Turned a blind eye to the energy that made us 
I ain't the same Canibus I was 
But I still get busy cause that's what Canibus does 
The rhymes are relevant day after my development 
Food for thought, beverages should be free but they keep sellin it 
The mixtape comes out today, announce the date 
The potato gets off his couch to wait 
Cause he knows something wicked his way comes 
They can hear the sound of the war drum, Canibus save them! 
I can't save you, but you can save yourself 
We can save each other; I just came to help"
 
Say word. "For Whom the Beat Tolls" is not the solution to all that ails rap, but neither does 
it make the much discussed problems of meaningless misogyny and vapid materialistic content worse. 
From the eerie Indian backdrop of "The Fusion Centre" to the futuristic booming beats of "The 
Goetia" to the epic musical groove of "Secrets Among Cosmonauts" Canibus keeps doing what he does 
best over and over again, spitting "raw energy" in his raps over stellar tracks - or as he puts 
it in the latter song himself:
 
"I don't teach cause teachers only receive contempt from the youth 
I know what I know, there's no need to convince you 
The poetry's fairly simple, you perceive the visual 
The grass isn't greener, it's browner 
I believe in the power that spins the Earth around upward and outward 
You say, "You don't like the album", I say you a coward 
You say you don't like the beats, I say what about them? 
Whether or not you like the lyrics I would not be surprised 
If you the devil in disguise I can see it in your eyes 
We are all equal; we are all sisters and brothers 
In spite of our colour, all we have is each other, they love us"
 
There are only a few guest rappers on "For Whom the Beat Tolls" - Killah Priest on "Liquid Wordz," 
K-Solo on "There He Has Been" and so on, but as with any good Canibus album he needs few guests 
because he is entirely capable of carrying the presentation on his own. That's not to say that 
Canibus hasn't had a few HORRIBLE albums too but by and large his catalogue leaves 
other rappers to shame and has become increasingly more consistant and worthwhile over the last 
few years. "For Whom the Beat Tolls" is not an exception to that constant in any way - it's the 
latest and greatest Canibus album you can't find in stores anywhere that you shouldn't wait around 
to get a copy of when it truly seems better for his raps to have infiltrated cyberspace and 
jacked us straight into the vision of William Gibson. This is Neuromantic Rap for the Body Electric.
 
Music Vibes: 8.5 of 10
Lyric Vibes: 8.5 of 10
TOTAL Vibes: 8.5 of 10
 
Originally posted: June 26, 2007 
source: www.RapReviews.com
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